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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-03 - Orange Coast Pilot: Coast The audience couldn't . enough of Steve and Eydie Gorme this week- end at the Pacific Amphltheatre.~A2 Carpooling hacf nothing to do with the reduced freeway traffic during the. orymplcs.f A2 California Rancho Seco nuclear owet plant.shutdown_ agaln./A3 GF Four-old found saf after spending night alo e In rugged mountains./ A3 Nation Defector may have been kidnapped and returned to China./ A3 Ice buildup has put the toilet aboard the space shuttle out of service./ A3 Jerry's MS telethons have come long way In 28 years./AS ' Infant mortality rate In.the United States In rising among the poor./ A4 -Animal rights activists rescue 421urkeys from dinner tables./ A3 Princess Caroline's son Is christened at the Monaco Royal Palace./ A3 . Psychedelic lights replac- ing wood panels and leather seats In England's pubs.IA4 Re·a • an • ! -. --- ORANGE COUNTY CALffORNIA i'> CfNTS ar·riVes for" r ally, I . By PHIL iEIDEJ\MAN • or o.1tJ P'ilttt Stall • nni ng to batty dtc:crs from local m1htar) ramtJia. ,President Ronald -R pn touched down m 0ranat CountJ unda). prepari~ lo launch his re:-elcction camp:µgn m an area llhnt has 5tron&Jy supponed him an past poliucal races. . ~fl-Wlll.ikidf.Gfr~,.. .. this mom1ng at a free public nill) in Male Square Park m Fountain Valle). Gates open at 8:30 p.m. Air Force One. the blue and \llibitc . · prcsid~taaJ,et. landcd safcl~ at about • S p.m. Sunda} at the U Manne Corps Air Stauon, El Toro. Dmsed in a brown suu anCI appearing fit and an good 'SptriL~ the President lhook hands and ,spot.e bricfl) to a crowd of about 2.000 ,~ ;ell-wishers at :the air base. Reapn then tra~elcd by rnotor- cadc to the Irvine Mamott Hotel for an o~ermght stay. l.t. Tup Ho~lc. a Manne spotesman. $aicf the crowd at El T-oro \Iii made up of military famil) members and ofT-dut mil1t.ary per- sonnel. ,. Some held up si&ns ·w11h DlC$saatS such as "Corona dcl Mar is four More Reagan," -0range Count) Loves Reapn .. and-Newpon Beach for Reapn ... Many •ia1tod more than tv.O hours in the SUD for a chance to sec the president. After 51.Cpping down from bis Jet. Reapn walked o,·er to the arq where well-)Vi~hers were waiting aed reached over a fmcc to shake hands with people in the cro~d. Then ~ stepped back to his black armorea limousi~ and took a microphone io h.and to address the gathering. ' .. 1 am not dOmg 'oicc chcc:kl any more," be quipped in a mercm:c to . his lOke la t month abbut bombing the SOvtet Union. which was ovcr- hurd dunng a microphone~ .. .. It's nice lo bC tn Oranar Count whett lhcgood Repubbcansgobcf~ they die." 1Re.ap.n said. After a pau M dded .... guess :good Dcmocnts too." • :·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:::·:· Pieetdent Reacan areen fan• after l&ncU.Di Sanday at the U.S. 11.arine Qorpe Air Statton at El T~ (Pleue eee UAGMC/ A2) ' . "An Evening of Preppy Literature" starts a li- brary cutural series off with some humor.I AT The U.S. Army F.leJd Band Is bringing Its rousing music to Orange Coast College./ A7 Sports They were brawling ln~he dirt at Anaheim Stadium as the Yankees avoided a series swoop by the Angels./81 The Dallas Cowboys won't need much motiva- tion when they take on the Rams tonight In the NFL opener for both teams./81 The Washington Redskins and Pittsburgh Steelers were among the losers In Week 1 of the NFL season./8 2 A sore-shouldered Mon- treal pitcher hands the light-hitting Dodgers a loss.JM E ntertain ment Actor George Gaynes has no trouble handling stardom In his 60s./ A• Bluegrass music was born on Jerusalem Ridge, Ohio./ Al Masked· gunmen rob NB woman ' in canyon· home-. Police are searching for two masked gunmen who forced their way into a Newpon Beach home early Sunday and robbed a re ident of jewlery and art objects wonh $200,000. The incident occurred at S:45 a.m. at a home on Rue Fontanbleu in the Big Canyon .eommunit). Police said Marprct allaway, 68. stepped outS>de to pick up her morning newspaper, when she was confronted by the masked gunmen. . The men dragged her back inside the home and stole the Jewlery and an . objects. according to the police re-' pon. The intruders then tied up Callaway and fled in ber auto, police said. : The vehicle was described as a 1982 Cadillac Eldorado with the per· sonalized license plate ... MAMSIE." Callaway. apparently home alone when the robbery. occurred, was not iajurc<Mii the iocidmL accordini to irutial police reports. The intruders were described as men in their 209-. one 5 fect-8 inches tall and wc1atun1 about 175 pounds. and the other S fect-5 inches tall with a thin build Smiies, gifts greet· KQ t:eaa Ghild~e il-c1-1c can __ Cindy Greer, 16, of Ana.helm, and Cbarlee Cra.l.M at the falraroun4a ln Coeta Mee&. The ne.nt Included car demonatradOG* and technical tleJlllii&ra, plue 19~..tyle entertalnmen~ Some Ylntage can will remain on riew throa&h 2 p.m. • LA ~ Goee, 14, ef Downey. elt behind the wheel ln . or surgery ofhtefather'•l923 P'ord,oneofhund.reda of rintaae apecl&Uty. can on Tlew thla w~kend at tlae eecond amn1.al Labor Day .. , Needed operations provided by efforts of Variety Club president Mort unsn1ne said of Sunday's emotional stt~ at lo:. n clcs International irport. There: 16 children ran&Jn& in ~ froJU 3 to l5 were met by mtmbcrs of !\fild surf doesn't deter beachgoers local Korean famalie) who will act a foster p.trcnts and house them when they · are not hospitalized. Variety Clu~ also hov.crcd the youoptcl') with _.Jin includina candy and 'pedal T·\htrts. · . . 100,000 gather at Huntington Beach pier ...... to watch finals in surfing competition · uthcm ( ahfomaa Uf quard from ,. n Di to Mah u commented that the urf 'a unu\uall lO\\. "It'~ h~c ukc Pacific here. the nw t hcaut1tul da~ \OU could tm· • me:· ~td Lo • f\scle1 ount) hlcguard Lt. 01ck.HeJncmann. .But mod~t urf did not top me . ; Two other children flew directly to h1caao. where the) beamed at a I 0. prople from pthtn111, at he • (P1eaie &OU AN/ A2} • (Pl lltLLIOft/D) A10 ~~ · G~ow~l!g E~ins key issue in.Mesa city .elec ti O~ 84 A8 A8 . . -· ... .• I ' .j .. • ..,,. .. GarpoOlingHot a faetoF iil light Olympic traffic From l A iat d Pr A surve) 1nd1catcs carpool& h d ab"°lutely notl\in to do'-' 11h re uetd traffic COnJt' uon during the 01) mp1c Gam~. and I I officials say they cao't explain \\hy Southern' Call· fornians a' oid ride $hunn¥. • :I don't li:now," · 1d all> Jameson, markeuna director of the CommuterComputcrcarpool finders SCI"\ ice. "We'rt a car-dependent so- ciet}. (But) when emplo}'tn put ~inc sort of incentive befo~ their crn- ployet\ the desire is much arcater:· SJon rue ; Olhcn noc:·r "111 .... ~mphn sdunngthe01)mp1c,,c,· n Rcc"cs td. lhou&h &0me empto)Cts 1d for M . J mtSun 1J "ha' impressed psoftnc to car-pooJ or oOcrtd pnus ommuterComputawa that, O\'Cr· 5.uch as vacauon tnps. all, th Ol)mp1 • traffi pl 1tnrn On the southbound Golden StaJc "worktd.'1 and they le med from at. . F"rt~w•> at Los Feliz. 8Qulcvai"d; "Theret1• V.1')'~ecanu~frtt.way) Caltran' counted ~n ''era · l.19 • .more . cOecta\el)' and 1t in .. ofvh pen.on• per C'Ar dunna the. two-hou~ chan11n1 wot sch~ules and rade"' rust\ pcnod on the Olympic Games harina. she said. SC"cond Wednesda>. Two wcck1 later "We "orkcd hard at gcuina people the occupanc) rate at the same point tp air-pool ... ,•· he said ... But v.c lso wa• 1.18. :be:lit'Ve thal cmp!o en, by chan,1n1 Apparently, th frtt Ind tht th~ir work hours. made a b1agtr pnze:,. weren't en.oualf\-01 a lure to impact (on traffic). No. the Ol)'mpac chang t.raffic s.taU£llcs. . weren't lt setback for c:ar·poohna. · • O~l>'. an the 1mmcd1ate v1can1t).' of 'Tram(.' count by Cahrans indicate 01> rnp1c e"ent~ was there any noucc- lhe ru~h-hour vehlcte occupanc}' rate able incrc sc in ride shanna . .. ... ::I I \I Warmer afternoons expected Coaetal 7t u ., .. "u 17 '7 '° ... ,, a Tides 11 ~ .. ., II 7 64 41 67 Jf ., 164 u 70 71 .. '70 67 .. '' a, ·u John Reeves. chief of the \tall' Department of:Tran portation traffic operations branch. said ma) be l'Om· muters didn't have enou&.h time to • form car pools dunu tbt' Olympic!> ··car· Ima is somethmg a ct-r· rum bOut 1:18 persons per Cftr here. The number· who «~ 1onally down slight! from a fe\.\ )ears ago. • share nd ~ wtnt from 29 J)(tt'ent ,\nd that figure showed almost no before the Games to 32 ptrcent '1 ... 1' 70 71 ., TUHOAY '11tll0w 12eten • JO 11\t'tlfloeh , ... " ,. . .._ tain gr: up f people Wlll do if tt\e change m pcc1al C'alttans occupjncy · durin . ·· -REAGAN IN OC FOR RALLY .... to ,. '° ~ t1 ... U M 73 •• '2 ao , ... •• st ., 41 .. 42 .~i.c,• : t'Olpm J.O ~high.. ..,,,"' 56 . ' lun MU Ioele~ II , ,. pm~ ,.J.. T'ue1G1y el I at • m end Mii eoMI •• 7 ti pm Moon ·-1ocs•1 •1 a,. p.111 -. 11 •2,, p"' R.egardm& the 1np to his home c.:onservat1H' Orange t ounty was Valley and Mission Viejo hiab state, Reagan said. ·•Everybody is selected for the opening of l' bands-wiH 1'CT'fonn~. ____ __,. __ smiling on the plane when \liC head" cam~1an bccau~ 1t has supported Hot, sunny Labor Day weather. is West.-We don't do it often l'nou&h. Reasan b} huge margins smcc . he expected for the rally. National Give us four more }carund v.e "-10." begao his poltucal career by wrnnm& Weather Service forecasters said the . 74 Utlle~ H left El Toro 1s a motorcade the Califof!l•a ~O\cm~rship·m 1966. mercury will reach the low 90s today · escorted by California Highway Pa--In 1980. u ga\c him th-e l~rge t in inland Oranae County. trol oflkcrs and Orange Count) maJorit) of \Otes ofan) cou'nty m the • Sbcriff s deputies. As the procession country Some of those covc~'lf on the left the Manne base. three cars m the I he polls give Reagan a healthy park art not ex~teaTo l>C .ans of the motorcade colhdcd. 'But a Reagan maflPn m his bad for C'aMornia's 47 PreSJdcnt's pohctes. spokesman s.a1d no on one was hun. electoral \/Ott~ The President's Members of.the anti-nuclear Or· The cars were carrying reporters and morning speech an Fountain Valle) ange County Alliance for Survival camera crews and at an afternoon rail~ an CuP.C!1mo · ha"e scheduled a protest to coincide About 125 people were outside the arc expected to dwell on tradit1onaf with the Reagan rally, SPOkeswoman Irvine Maniott. hoping for a glimpse family \lall,1c-:., pamousm and op-Marion Pack said. of the president. But he was quack!) timism. · "The idea 1s to show that not all of whisked ms1d.e through a side en-Those attending the Mile $quart Oran&e County' rs Reaaan Country.'' trance and taken to his suite rally will be directed to free parking Pac~ said. Demonstrators will lane The presidcnual part) was \Ched-areas after entenng on Brookhurst two streets along the par~'s edae. she uled to occupy 16th and I 7th Ooor Strec1 at Hell A venue or on Ed1hger wd. and they're betn$ encouraged luxury rooms at the I -)ear-old hotel. A venue at "'qrd Street. Police arc ·•to brina a sign with their message for A spokesman for Reagan !>aid the e:i1.pecting up to 30.000 people to Mr. Reagan." president was scheduled to spend a attend the raJly, which will take place Meanwhile. the Dcmocrauc pn"atc evenina at the hotcf Sunda} in lhe cricket field area in the cast Party's presidtntial hopefuls will v1s11 with no pubhc meetmgs. The spokes-central portion of the park. . elsewhere in ~uthcm California man said Nancy Rcapn. the pres1-The grounds wtll be tempomnly . today. dent's wife. had been in Los Anacles fenced, and those attending will have Democruic presidential nominee earlier an the da} and was scheduled to step through a1rport~t}pe metal Walter Mondale and runnina ma.te to Join the President at the Mamou detectors No one will be allowed in .. : GeraJdine Ferraronn~ht!CSuted f"or a Sunday night. the rail) area before 8·30 a.m. The late afternoon appearance at Long Today's rail~ at Mile Square Par~ program 1s scheduled to start at 9 •5 Beach Munc1pal Airport an bouraf\er will kick off what is bean& called a.m. a nally 1n their honor be11ns. said Reagan's "last campa1~n ·· Participants will include actors campa1an spokeswoman Jeannie 'lflc wants to st.art 1t 1n his home Charlton Heston and Mike Conners. Larkins. state before audiences he ~nows arc ~ngcls baseball team owner Gene Sens. Alan Cranston of California fncndly and for whom he has a lot of Autrey. Gov Ge.orgc DeukCroJian and Gary Hart of Colorado and Los afTecuon and haveal.,.,aysgncn him a and U.S. Sen Pete Wilson. The F1~t Angc1cs Mayor Tom Bradley arc lot of suppon;· James Lake. press .. Lady and two of the Presidents scheduled speakers. and a.band and sccrctar) for <he Reagan Bush cam-children. Maureen and Ron Jr. are break.dancers arc to perfonn. Larkins pa.1gn. told the Associated Press. · expected to attend. The Fo~ntain said. MESA COUNCIL CANDIDATES •.. From Al n-ecded to maintain the c1tv's tax base. wb1ch supports pohce. fire and other i:>ubhc services. "We've aot to continue 10 grow ... he sa1d. "But this doesn't mean uncontrolled helter-skelter gtowth ·· Hall was appointed to the council in 1978 and was re-elected 1n 191)0 He also served t"'o years on the PLann1na Commission and t~o on the cit) redevelopment agenc; Incumbent Johnson. who 1s run- nma for his second term, defended a counct..I decision an November to allow an unpopular extension of South Coast Plaza by C.J. Scgcrstrom & Sons The acuon was seen b~ many s a green ltght for other commercial projects 1n the area · I feel for the people. but that property was too valuable. We felt as a council the revenue would be valuable to the whole city," said Johnwn. "Expenditures go up as well as the population Like any other business. it's M-0-1'-E-Y ' The decision b) Councilman Ed McFarland to step down from h1sseat wall assure that at least one new member wi II be elected to the cou nci I Amo1'g the candidates arc ex- 'vta)or Domm1c Rac1t1 as "'ell a<> planning comm1ss1oners Charle~ "v1arkcl and Clarence "Chic" Clarle Raciti. 66, ~id-he supports he1aht and density restnctions on "h1~·mc bu1!dinss that ~nerate addtt1onal traffic. increase noise and cause a la l Ii. of pnvacy" Rac1t1 ~rvcd on the council lrom 1972 to 1980 ~fore stepp1 ng do" n and mo\ ina to the Lake Elsinore area. A longtamc owner of a local Jt"elf) store. Raciti moved back to (o'ita \iesa early • this month with the admitted intention of pot,,tbl> run Just Call 6 .42-6086 · Dally Piiot Delivery It GuarantHd ning for a c It) Council scat complex de\lelopment ISSUC. The City "l sec thinp happenina that I'm must also protect the property O\liln.- not happy with." he said. add1na that ers' riahts to lcplly improve their the council "could have done a hell of land. a lot better" in taking ca re of Howe \lcr. Soffer. S2. complains residents. · that "large developers fet more Mark'el. 45. 1s a self-described bfeal.:s than 1ndi"idua home· advocate of commercial de\lelop-owners." : mcnt north of the San Diego Free.,.,.!ly • Steel. 43, is a fourth-time council an unpopular stance "'"h nonbs1de candidate who supports hish-quality; homeowners low-den11ty developments. He was one of the four planning "I'm for development as Iona as 1t 'commmon members who gave their doesn't intrude on the homeowners' blessing 10 the controversial Arnel rights or lifestyles.'' said Steel. "I'm Dcvcloprnent pro1ect, which wall very protective oflhosc homeowners bnng a 16-0oor hotel. s1); h1a,h-nse 1n that (nonh) aru." office towers and a 300.unit apart· This is the second lime in the ment complex to Bear Street. poltt1cal arena for Wheeler, a 29-year· "You need a \11ewpomt and mine lli old Newport Beach attorney who ran pro-srowtt\," said Markel. m the last municipal election. He said Converse!). Clarke. 52. was the the city should concentrate mort on only comm1SS1oner voung apinst the residcntia.I rather than commercial Amel project "The pro1cct was dcvelopmeht. · beautiful but too mten~ to be near .. They're turning the. (north) area existinJ residences Growth has to be (of Costa Mesa) 1oto another Century tempered." he said City and we don't need it," he said. Other candidates in the crowded · Yates. 39. is a supponcr of what he field arc Harry Green. Barbara calls sensible growth. He said ttst· Hornbuclle. Sid Soffer. Chnstophcr ·denb have become anaere.d over Steel. C>ave Wheeler and Dou&Jas •problems wnh developments that Yates were once billed as "good neighbors." GrCt'.'n. operator bf the city golf One such project. the Pacific rnursc. "as una,ailable for com-Amphitheatre. raised 'the 1re of ment nearb) homeowners after it opened Hornbuckle 41 :isan ac11vc mem-last summer and beJ,an hostina rock N-r of the Mc~ West Homco~ncrs concerts _ .\~!>oc1at1on one of the J.roup., com-··1 thank that 1s the turnina point plaining that t~ council ha<; turned when residents became displeased its back on rc5idcnu.. with the council." 1.1id Yates. He "There JUM seem'i to be a ¥~neral described the city's cfTons to make lack of rcprd." said Hornbuckle. the amphitheater conform with local addina that the real issue 1sn'1 gro"th, noise limits as "too little. too late." but qua ht) development Yates added he doesn't expect "!don't wont to sec the c1l\ ht-come much competition from the incum· a commercial cen1er onl).'0 she \aid. bents. "The)· ha\le lo rest on their Soffer. a politKal gad0). ~aid record ... and their record isn't that qualtty j, onl} one awt·ct of the aood."' \\h1i11 do you hke abou1 tht Dall) Pl)ot"! What don't you llkt? Call lbt numbt'r at lt'ft and~ our mena1e will be recordtd, 1raa1crlbed and delivered 10 tht appropriate editor. . --,.lit 11me 24 -hour ao1werlna ltr\lkt may be used to record letters to tbe edilor on any topic Contributors to our Ltuer1 column mull Include tbelr name and tf'lt'phone numbt'r for \lf'rlflcafion. No d rcaledoo calla, pltue. Ttll u1 what' on your mind. R•NGE CO-'ST Daily ~ilat Circulation 714/M2~ Claulfled 1dv1rtl1lng 714/M2·M71 All oth•r d1pertm1nt1 M2...Q2t MAJN OF'9CI H. l . ~hwarlz Ill ~rshe Ao••mary Churchman Cofil fOff'i I Stephen F. Carazo Production fan Donald l . Wllllamt C rcul non M n or ,.., IO t:.:z-.. HultllflOIO!' ...... ,.., IO 12 Al..-.1911)',~ .. ., l.ubboc;k '76 2UfM .. to :-._,, t2 ~MOt!lee ... 70 ., ~ w 12 UIOlhd.00.... n SM OieOO Oliy Ellcores keep.Steve & Eyd~~ · singing at Amphitheatre By CAROL MOORE Of IM Delly Net ltd• Encores kept Steve Lawrence '1nd Eydie Oorme singina o"en1me at the Pacific Amphitheatre as the Iona Labor Day weekend started and their fans relished the mellow tone. The holiday moOd was emphasized ~ lyrics .in.a mcdle> from "la Cage Aux Folles" -"'the best of times is now ... what's left of summer but a · faded rose, so hold this moment fist ." The proaram was a review of other such moroents betwecft the talented couple's first appearance on Steve Allen's TV show rn the early 1960s and their 'newest albtim. "Through the Years." "We had a newl~~ed spat on our wa)' to the studio to record 'No Two People Have Ever Been So in Love'." _Gorme rccaUcd... tn mtroducin& the ensemble at show's end. light·hearted number that was one of Known for their Emm)-award their fif\t hits. winnina specials saluting Berlin and Later. after singing a few sonas in Gershwin tunes, the talented duo did Spanish. she announced that she a I S-mmute medley of Frank Sinatra would be rccordi an album with standards for 1hc1r first encore. . • Julio la.Jesias next ebruary. Jokina about "where else do you ~o While she ventured into new in Costa Mesa after 11 o'clock." Broadway material. her husband Lawrence .obliied with some more provided -sonp ··we ioj.roduccd on sonas and some of the best., albeit record" or ••from our earlier years.·· intimate, patter of the even ma. . mo t paraphrasing thc.$t'ntament that "Does the ltaqt1n1 crew ao home "l Can't Gi"c You Anythin& Bot before We do? That's OK. we'll lock Love ... Among these offcnnas WC'l"( up when ~e leave," he quip~ wheri "Aga'in .. "More" and "Si>c.ak Low." hecoul~I) taetthcspotsd1mmcd'for~ ' · ----_ 'romantic ballad. The onl) blunder of the show was E"entually Saturday's well re· Gorme's first outfit, a black and white-. ccavcdconc.crte.ndcd on a happy note outfit which." even Lawrence de· . as the sinacrs ·sent the crowd out "on scnbod as "two dresses thrown the road •aain ... maluna music for together:•· ~he seemed 50 pound my friend-s aaain" for.two mQre days liahter m. the dazzlina red pants ofleisure. -· Reagan; Mondille. call telethon LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP) -Com· ed1an Jerry Lewis bepn his 19th Muscular Dystrophy Telethon on Sunday with call~ from · President Rcaaan and Democratic challcnacr Walter Mondale as Lewis sought to 'OJ> the S30.6 million raised la~n year. Reapn thanked Lewis for his work with the Muscular Dystrophy As- sociation. sayiria it had arown from a few concerned parents two decades aao to a current force of 2 million \IOI u n tee rs. "We have to thank you for bnllJlna this so forcibl> to the Amencan people." Reaaan said in a telephone call to the show. "This 1s a wonderful thina you do. and God bless you for it.'' . CoNTINUEU STORIES Twenty mmutes later. Mondale called. sayanj he had tried ·t.O geJ throuJh earher, but "someone was pluaaina up the line ... · • · "Whatever di"ides us. were all tc>acthcr where our kids are con- cerned." Mondale said.. . Lewis descnbed )he candidates as "very decent men." The impact of the telethon was felt earlier this week when aides of the two candidat~jockcyed for pos1t1on on the phone Ojllls, w1th both sides concerned abouticttm1on dunna the first hour of the show. The cntertatnl}lent bhu bqan Sun· day evenina and 1s scheduled to run until 3:30 p.m. PDT toda). Lewis and telethon officials hope to raise "$I MILLION AT BEACHES .•• From Al Huntinaton ~ach pier to watch the finats of $64,000 Ocean Pacific Pro Surfina Champ1onsh1p and causina massive traffic in the late afternoon. Tomm) Curren of Santa Barbara won the men's division for the second . stra1aht year and Freida Zamba, of Miami Beach. Ftc:"wort lht women-s competition. Huntinaton Beach city stnior lifc- auard Marc Panis said the surf was h1ah enou&h to meet Assoc1at1on of Surfina Profcss1onals standards "Their rules arc 1t has to be O\ler 18 inches." Panis Aid. "It was one to three (feet) today." Further nonh. leaders of No 0 11, Inc esumated that some 2,000 beachaocrs opposc<t to oil drilling in the Pacific Palisade hnkcd hands and towels to form an unbroken line thatstrctched from Tcmc al Canyon to Santa MoriTca. · "h restored my faith in human nature." said Alice Gowland of No 011. She said the human cham. whose part1c1pants mcludina actor Ted Kni&ht and U S Rep. Mel Levine. 0- Cahf .. was photographed from a helicopter. KOREAN CHILDREN •.• FtomAl crowd of v.ell-wishcrs at O'Hare airport before beina whisked away to a ho p1tal . • Another two. didn't come in at the expected time in Seattle, b&ffiina Vanety Clubs representauve Lloyd Huattes and tclev1s1on news crews for a time. However. unshine said the youna· sters amved early and ""nt on to pokanct their ulumate desunatton "The 'ids have amved ~fely in Spokane. ' Sunshine id ... They're now in the hand orthe foster parents up there, tnd they're 101n tn the Dcaconc s Lu.thcr1n> ospual-.u•J~---- tomorro~. He said Hamct Hod tntcrnauon 1 H man mance Group. worlin:iJ wnh t c Vanety Childtc.n' Lafchn~" v. lhcm ofTin Korea somcumc fore he lcf\ hcn.tlf:" The y01m n "'n scm riced 1n Los A In all ~c:.-bk to 'lk off ihe plane, but 1h m of th 1r condn1on w s d m tizcd htn on of them eollapscd. · "On M1hech1ldrrn had b:ld pcU . . Related story on A& more" than the $30,691,627 raised last Labor Day. The 1983 f14ure was • the third highest since Lcwts bc&an hosuna the telethons 1n 1.956. He has. been involved with tbe MDA since its found1na in J 9SO. This year's show will be canied .b~ 194 stations in the United States apd cable television in Canada: M DA officials say the telethons have raised roore than $300 mrllioo in the fight aaainst •O muscular di.cases. The 21 112-hour telethon was apin emanatina from Caesars Palace in Las Vcaas. No Oil 1s fightina Occidental Petroleum's plan io dnll at a site across the Pacific Coast Hiahway from the Will Roacrs State Beach ... A uendance at most beaches was up from Saturday._ which was...:.& bit cooler. The crowds ran 300,000 10 the 5outh Bay~ 27s;OOO from Santa Monica to Topanp Ca_n_y_on. I S0.000 at Malibu-Zuma: 210,000 in the city of Sin D.ieao: S0.000 at Newpon. 60,000 at Lona Beach, 120.000 at Huntinaton Btach state end local be.aches. . . Nlcara(ua sajs·u.s. pllot killed in raid . MAN dlJA. scar un (AP) -The pilot OI' a U •. -m de helicopter. killed ¥.hen tus aircraft was !.hot do"'n dunng an aua k on a m1lit r)'. school near the Honduran border "1r. thought to be a North men n.'· the offic11tl nc"'spaper Bamcttda said undav. · • • " • The hclicopt r and four ai,Plancs attacked the Tapash M1litllr)' School near anta'Clara, on Saturday, about 10 miles from the Hondurln border, Defense Mini~tcr Humberto Onega iol1d in an interview eparntc from th.c newspaper account. · . · · · Oncaa said the aircraft also attacked Santa Clara itself. and that four children and two adults were killed. The pilot~"' thouaht to be Nonh Amtrican because he ··was very tall had blonde hair." accordina to the Barncada. Sikh hijackers sent back to India NEW DELHI. India (AP)-Sc\.cn Sikhs who hijacked an Indian Au'hncs ptanc'to Dubai a week ago "ere c~trad1tcd to India on Sunday aficr the United States rejected their request for poliucal as)lum. A chartered Boeing "107 cal'T) ang the-Sikh militants arrived sti'only after I • ~ a.m. Monday in New Delhi, where the h1~ackers face trial. • · • The hijacke~s sorrendcred,afier officials promised to leJ them stay in the l:1n1ttd Arab Emirates city of Dubai for a ~ec){, and to tr) to help them act to the United States. -- Shuttle · toilet out· of order , CAPE C A \!£RAL Fla (AP)-· A buddup of ace. blockin& hoes id'Lat dump c cc 'Iler o\'Ctboard from tbt butt.le D1s.co'Cfl'· tomsn· cd Ms ion ContrOl on Sunda) lo order 1he fih~·man. on w m n cn-w not to use'the dnp's toil t.. ··we would hkc you 10 use lhc onboard Apollo baas:~ the tronau :ere told .. On the poUt> m flight utronauu used i> he for human waste and 4 of the c stored aboard D&Over) for JU 1 uch n emergenC). M1 ion contrul 1d 1hett ~ cnoua,h space m lhc rapidly flllt ste Y..-ater tank for one or •~o ... cuwmcn U> use 1bmu1h1N:cM Salvador D•li reported undemc:-urtahed BAR( ELON\, Spain (AP) -Surrcahst painter Salvador Dah. 80, --rc--c-ov-c•ttn.nr ft'orrrbumm~ Piere. also appears t~crtrn~my undernourished, has doctors said. . • mis ion and it was prautncd 1hatJt Royal christening woutd t:ic made uat11.btc 10 Jud But a friend of Dali's, Antoni Pill.tot. said S~nday that the artist 1s lucid and wants tO return to his castle hpme 111 norttreast Spam-a soon as 1>0ssible. Doctors at a news confCrencc Saturday gave no date for Dali's release. Resnik. The lnfant~-Caroline--nf'"-. -Mu;-Brand Monaco. uehbillilap: Prtn-----:..:.:.;~:.;,1c=e~,.bc::u~11d'.Xu::-::p='".-;::o-:;;-n71thi;::;e;-::;; JX>;-;:rt.-:.":'al'fA":o;:;r---lf Monaco, Aildrea Albert Cul!aahl. wu CUollDe hold.ln& her 900; rather Penzo of the new shuttle. at first blocked only cb.rtatened thla weekend at the Monaco · the palace chapel; and Stefano CUirathl. the norzle used to dump 1he excess Dali suffered leg burns when an electrical short-circuit set the canopy ofh1s· bed afire Thur1da). Ro1at Palace. ~ the priTate ceremony the father. Prince Ralner m of Monaco ii water that is a by-product of the were. from ~t~ Marco Culi'Uht. the aeen ID the foregroUDd. The infant ... clcctricit~ created by the ship's fuel Seven killed In.Australian biker melee godfa~er: Prlncesa Stephani~. aod'mother; born OD June 8 . ccl~i sion control decided :IC) ice ;tf water still could be forced thro • SYDNEY. Australia (AP} -Two rival motorcycle gangs attacked eac'h other wuh auns, knives and machetes 1n a crowded Sydney parkins lot on Sunday, leaving ss:~ men and a 14-)ear-old girl dead and 20 people injured. police said · At least sc\.Cn of the wounded had been shot and two were in critical condauon after the fighting between the "Commanchcros" and the "Banditos': at a sate where motorcycle enthusiasts and others gather on Sunday afternoons to pass tame and swap motorcycle pans. police said. but·that caused a second outlet -the Chinese defector believed :!~~~~~~~~~"!~ dramatically shov.'Cd the almo t- J , instaneous formation of the .second kl.dnapped,· ret(Jrn' ed h . iceblobandlhcdoubltnginS11eof1~ The dead girl was selling raffic t1c~cts. pohcc said. The fightlna began in the parking lot of the Viking Hotel in the Sydnc) suburbofM1lperre when two shots were fired in the air and then a man was shot an the head, Graham totd a reporter for the Austrahan Associated Press. V 1kang is a public bar NATION • ------- Draft board checking d~vers' licenses WASHINGTON (AP) - A Chi- nese petroleum engineer who de· fccted to the Unned States from his nation's consulate 1n New York last Apnl has returned home, a State Department official said Sunday. A Chinese government spokesman on Saturday said Zhang Zhengao, 47. had returned home voluntarily aner n:ce1vin& a letter' from his wife. WASHINGTON (AP) -The government says it routinely screens the However. Zhang's friends and his names of 18-year-old men who gc.t dnver's licenses to make sure they have American laW}er suggest he was registered with the Sclecttve Service.System for the standby draft kidnapped by' Chinese offi~1als. The Every state except Montana and Hawaii provides computenzcd tapes Washington Post reported in Sunday a1vina the, names, ages and addresses o'f ~e"'I) been~ dnve.rs. Hawaii has cd1ttons. agreed to coopeT"atc, but M~ntana officials sa) their state s pnvaC) lav. "We believe (Zhang) has returned proh1b1ts shanna such inform-.non with an~one _ ~e." said .a ·state Depaninent Newly licensed drivers who are not rcgJsten:d wnh'Select1v~~1~~ get~~ spbkesman who spoke only on ccin- lcttcr reminding them that males are required to register within 30 days of dition he not be idcnuficd b~ name . turnina 18. according to Col W1I Ebel. director of government and public He refused to comment on the affairs at Selective Service. . circum~tances surrounding Zhang's The Amencan Cl\· ti Liberties union objects to the pracuce. return to C'hina "As a milter of public poJic). 11 is. vel') wrongheaded for the government . to be engaged i,n' this sort of inforrnauon swapping." said Ban; L> nn. Ho"' ever. a fnend of2:~~ng s. Yang lcaislame counsel fOr the ACLu Huaaan. ti>ld t~~ Post. I m sure he "It's nightmarish for a persort to find out that c"en the simple act of was kadna,)pcd .putting has name and address down )cars later ma) serve as e" 1dence in some Yang. a feflow defector who hved cnmanal prosecution," Lynn said near ihang an New York, said he first d1sco .. ercd Zhang missing on July 20. Montana firefighters ~inning .battle He said he found the door ofZhang's apa11ment locked from the inside, and left behind_ were clothes. a new' suncasc. a television set and a video cassette recorder, the newspaper said. Wana said friends an China told ham Zhana was taken to the Chinese Consulate 10 New York in July and kept there until he was escorted to the Chmcse flight from John F. Kennedy 0 me fj~htc bonom Jine is that we &Qt buildup n~ on both nozzlCi. •• wd _ commander Hcnt) W. Hartsfield. It .\1rpon on Jul~ 19. the Po t reported. appeared the first chunk extcnctc<i The ne"spaper quoted R~n two to three feet from the shuttJe. the Belluscio, a Flushing. N. Y .• attorney second was smaller. i-tp~nting Zhana on his as)lum "The buildup you see on the was1e ~nuon. as ,sayma an FBI aacnt told noz:z.le hapt>encd in srand total of him Zhang s return appeared to be . 5-10 seconds." said Hartsfield. voluntary. · Outside the discomfon of havana -------------------------no toilet. the astronauu "ere not · 'S t 1 t ,J,. threatened in any way. The concern an ;as rescue UT.n.. evs about the ice was that it miibt come 'J 1 ' off durin1 the &mina re~ntry 1010 frorn,hol1day dinner tables ~~:;~~~~.:~ii:.cdriCsda> The eas). but time-consumwa LIVEA'POOL. England (AP)-An animal r:tghts¥tM11 In a Santa solution for the piobkri\ wa to tum C1.W tuft~ 42 tut1ceyt from a breeding f.-m wty Sunday to the ihip toward the un and I.hat w rMCUe them from ChrtstmU dinner tablel, a group~ the Animal done. But that th02tcncd to delay the LlbefatkM'I Front dalmed. continuation of tests Monda) oo \he An lnOnymOUI c8ler ~tor~ the group telephoned I 02-foot solar sail bcina tested for th( .. _ n.-..i... .... ___.u. p .a-AAl-.a-__ .. first time on the flight. tnw ""'·~·"""'-'"'newt agency, r ... ,___uun ...... reported-1i"100 control said the solar arra) the r~ on Whit~ Farm In Malling vtlhlge, ~ l'Tlllel from v.ill not work properl) if it ttts too nortttweet~ poft. cold. The c.uei Mk! the tur:keye were taken to a ••sanctua,.Y" In .outh Miss Resnik raised the golden tar WaJea. wing 10 stories high· abo"c ibunle In Uverpoot,. apokeatnan for the Merseyside~ tald omcers OiSCO\ ery·s CllJO bay Sunda) w«e lnvettigatinO 1 brMk-Jn at the farm. Poflce tllao l8kl Sl~s had almost hle a sail on a ta\J ship af etd beert daubed on 89¥Wal buUdlngs at the farm. • -1n dcmand10g t4 ts of • method "Butwecen'tconftrmWhetheri42turkeysweretuen-thereare that ma} one day harness the sun·s al ta.: ......... _.. t t .... ._ __ ,. ......... f I ...... ..._ f power for spa~ stations. . eever ,._.._,"'. • .... _ .. , _"" 011urt 0 count no ma tot, u .. af"*' The shiny ··solar sail.. "'IS doetn't know," Nld a P<>ttce spokesman, Who In One W.th ulual Brttilh )trctched first to 73 feet. then to 11s full pollce procedur•. apoke on condltlon he was not Identified.·· 1nz;toorheight to.chectits st.abilit . -HELENA. Mont. (AP) -Scalcd-do.wn firefighting forces hacked awa) Sunday at four remaining timber fires as officials warned that drying weather could mak~ cond111ons "go right back" to those last week when 250.000 acres were scorched. One fireman died aturday from IOJUries sustained while battling one of dozens of infernos last week . and nearly 40 homes and buildings were dc~troycd. and hundreds forced to flee Mondale: POlitics, reliiion don 't mix Postal strike unlikely this year "EW YORK (AP) -.\strike against the US Postal Sen1ce 1s unhkel> this year, PoStmastcr General Wilham Bolger and Moe Biller. head of the laraest postal worker; union. said Sunda). Bolger noted, however, that the Postal Service has contingency plans to fire any sinkers. And Biller said a stnkc vote by his American Postal Workers Union was needed "in case he pulls an) d1ny tncks" The two appeared separately on NBC's "Meet the Press " Two more tropical storms feared MIAMI (AP) -Tropical storm Cesar was the strongest of a trio of Atlantic weather systems forecasters monitored Sunday. but "potentially danacrous" Arthur and Bertha still could fla"'re up from their tropical dtpress1on status, forecasters said. As of noon EDT. Cesar was about 200 miles southeast of St. Johns. Newfoundland. and moving northeast at 20 mph. It was near latitude 46.0 nonh and longitude 49.0 west, according to a National Hurricane Center statoment. CALIFORNIA -------- Rancho Seco ahut down again SACRAMENTO (AP)-The Rancho Scco nuclear power plant ~as been shut down aaaan th•~ time because of a h1&hcr-than-normal le' el of rad1oact1\c iodine 1n the reactor coolant svsttm Jeff Marx. a spokesman tor the Sacramento Municipal Utiht) D1stnct. which operates the plant. ~1d it would "undoubtedly" take several weeks to rco n the facihty. • he shutdown marked the seventh time the plant, located about 2S miles southeast of Sacramento, has been· put out of business in a year. Workers •trike at fourth SF reataurant S"N f:RANCISCO {A.P) -A foutth ,restaurant wa struck Sund~y b,Y union cmplo)e~ involved in a contracl d1 pule wtth 17 of n Francisco s bett·knoY.n dinina spot Pickets were postrd unday at North Beach Rc'itaurant. id Barbara Lewis. pokcswoman for local l of the Hotel and.Re taurant Employtc and Banendc~ Union. ..: On Saturda)·, union cmplo)ees 'lralked off their Job al oma' . Tarantano's and Pompei' Grotto, all an the popular Fhhe an's Wh rfarcl. Th~ "-Orken• contra t c~pirtd Fnday at midnight. I forest tnp \\Ith h miles c 1 ot Candidates launch campat ns today; Reagan denteshe wan!s state rellgion- • ~ l I .. cry good. But I think there 1s a fine hnc I think "'e arc near the edge:· Dole said on ABC's "This Weck\\ uh David Brink.le ." Reapn will address a campa1gn- Opt'Oina rall)' Monday 1n Fountain Valley, which proved its long-time loyah)' to him m 1980 by aiving the former California aovemor the larg- est majonty of votes of any count} In the nation. · -1 • "It's Ronald Reagan's last cam- paian... campaian press secretal') James Lake said. "Ht wants to start It in his home tate before audiences he knows are fnendly and for whom he has a lot ofaflection and bavc al"'a)s given him.a lot of suppon:· A second rail) was planned l\iQO· day afternoon to tht n0t1h in San JO$C. ":"- .. Mass voter slgn ups planned . ... I ' • ·ru:a-presse British pubs .forced to adapt I • "' a pina-cum<ockta1l hou~ and, an ~he By BEN DOBBIN evening. a single • bar complete wuh ( Of Tile Aasoclated Prt11 munilcvel'Ooor mi~rored ceiling and LO.NOON -fn 19tf . Halnlre Jlashingligtns. ' . Bclloc, author, patriot. and pub lov.c~. "Some of the older customer> warned that th~ decline of Ensland,s before the redec (redecoration) didn't pubs would unravel the nation ~ like the change and don't come back," social fabnc . .. said Walsh ... But we now have twice ''Wl'len you ha\'c loo,t your tnn he as many cuslomel'S. tt'5 obv1ously wrote '.'drown )'our empty selves. for what the pubhc wants." you ~111 have lost the last of Eng-A similar-type bar~ mile awa)' at land. . . . Marble Arch is the City of Que~'C. Pub'> remain as . ub1qu1tous as where slot machines rattle and a Juke c~urch steeples in British t~wns and box wails. The tile-floor cafe at the 'tllage . bu.t tight-fisted ~1mes and front, "ith chairs and $unshadcs ne.wly !l~Qu!red. tas.tes ha\e changed crowding tht sidewalk. leads to a th1s ,Bn11sh inst1tu11on . . plu h laser-lit rntenor Beer.sales have falle~ 10 per.cen~ in T-0 ·circumvent the strict licensing five >~~rs. More ~ople are ·buy1ff. laws that limit -English pubS to their tipple at grocene and. 0 -opening for JO hours on' weekda)'s licenses. thc equivalent of ltquor and fhe 00 Sunda}s. the Quebec sells stores. and dnnk1ng at home. non-al~ohohc refreshment!> before .Wine sales have quadrupled since h al 11 a m weekday opening Bntain JOtned the European Com-t e norm · · . mon Mark.et in 1973. giving nse to tame and between) p.m. and 5 P ~·· wine bars and adding to the variety of when pubs arc required to close. drinks f!Tllons now demand. Amen-.. Bars have. to ~hange to b~~~i- h -~ --.r 11-li'...-.1 _ more money.' -said-Ren11t<t .. can-sty e ua~ anu ast-uuu res 43 Q bee's senior barman. "But I taurants are everywhere. ,. "!e 1 ~ Ttrousanttfl>f'f rad1honal-style pu 'ttrinlrit-has lost a ot----o 1'ttter. lie houses are riding out the recession. When. you com.~ down to it. all they their doors kept open by the Big Si~ want is money. . · brewenes that own two-thirds of Catenng to a wider ~anety of tastes Britain's 68.000 locals or pubs. "'1s the way the b~~wing industry 1s Big news . But lhe hard-pressed brewers are havm& to develop. sa·.~ David Jones stan1ng io redefine pubs. of Whitbread brewers. We ha~e a lot John Fitzgerald, a contractor in the amall, north-coaat the •tan so all his truck-drlvlntfi~enda would know right Strobe hghts. thumping pop music. of property around Bntain: We ve got community of Orick, Ca., alts Jn front of hla i1ant birth away. The algn, perched on a aide above Fitzgerald'• video machines and plush ps)-to make the best use ofn .. announcement with hi• new son, John Jr. Fitzgerald built ranch, can be seen from Highway 101. chedehc setttn&s are.becoming com-"W1•h the recession. we ve had to ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, mon ~atures 1n dozens of London look ha~ at whm peo~~~n~~nd ... This is your last chance to take advantage of the fantastic values In Store for .you this Labor Day! Shop and compare! PLO THE ORIGINAL LEATHER STRESSLESS ftlt\ ~ifl<...,wcor"l'Qf ~ 11'-'l't-• UY1. ' '"<1IOn l>MWIC• PtW1C1 OI!' -oen IUl"OtN!lafV ldl"SU ~!>Of' .tf CO"Offl ro OW tllgf'l{l'U Vl.f'f>nq °"°"' "'"9fll UDN>Kf .... .0 WI 1'""""'-( lJYOv #lfnf'< M'<I SUOP>ftl'O l)v I \l\Jr'JV tnrc"'W' ""-1111.lt'n"'Q OftOM.to \ inciuoeo• INTERNATIONAL CONTEMPORARY-FURNITURE taverns and spreading to locals hanse our style dramatically, he tluoughout the countrv. repfacing the added .. We saw th.at some )'Ounger dark wood panehng and leather-people wanted a nice environment. co"ered seats that 1rad111onall> but ~~~} don't want at to look like a adorned a Bntish watenng hole pub The trad111onal Bnt1sh pub 1s But one chain. the David Bru~c _r;; usuall} di' ided an to a hard-floor bar. pubs 1n London. 1s buckin~ t_he tren"{T"- where mostly men drink pints on Besides recreating trad1t1onal in- their feet or perched on stools. pnd a • ten rs of a single mahogany bar. brass plusher loun&e. where families or footratls and unvarnished groups sn around tables in mon.· flot>rboards. David Bruce pubs have secluded surroundings. revi ved an ancient innkeep1ng prac- Dark ales and stouts still preferred t1ce of brewing ales on the premises. by older customers are losing ground ·Bruce's six pubs all smell of hops to continental lager beers. The hghter. and barley, hint o(. the spit and frothier brews now account for more sawdust of Belloc's day and serve I than a third of beer sales in Britain. home brews with quaint names like • Trad1t1onal English pub grub hke Dogbolter. Tavistock and Bull Frog steak-;rnd-k1dnc) pie. sausage-and-There are no foam-backed carpets mash and Cornish pasties (meat pies) here. no room for fake beams. slot is giving "'a} 10 p111a and .ham-machines and httle wrought-iron burgers. lamps • G1llra> ·s 1n London's P1ccad1ll~ "W th the recession people are TEAK DESK FROM DENMARI< d1s1nct t) p1fies the oew-stylc pub. us 1 · . -•· d ~huttered front flung open 10 more careful ""here they drtu1'. an passcrsb> "'llh a tiled cafc parlor at choos) about what atmosphere the~ · b ""ant." said David Peacock. 30. 1n-1he front and a more usual pu setting house brewer at Bruce's latest pub. bathed in red spotlights at t.~e back the Ferret and F rkin "It's eas) to walk into. said ns 1 · manager Cohn Walsh. 27. "'.\n}bod> "You're going to lose the m1ddle- ca-n look 1n the door and Sc.'C what of-the-road pubs that try to cater to the' 're gelling 1n for .. everyone." he predicted. "In the Until 18 months ago C1illray's was future. you'll find more pubs tatenng a trad1ttonal pub No"' 11 c,crves as a to different needs." Infant m~rtality's -. . r1s1ng among poor ~ Premature deliveries. low birth w~~ghts primary causes of deaths among t~e poor By JANE SEAGRAVE Of Tbe Associated Press BOSTO"I -The) arc uncmplo~ed mothers too poor to pa)' for a taxi 10 the chn1c. unwed mother\ unwilling to leave children alone at home and teen-agers too scared to admit the) arc pregnant · Some believe the) can't afford medical care. For others. in the words of one 1nner<1ty mother .... rs JU'll simple. plain laziness." They arc women at h1gh/nsk of losing their infants at birth' or soon afterward~. and some studies say they 11rc appeanng in 1rtcreasing numbers in poor and predominantly black urban areas. A recent Harvard School of Public Health stud> indicates infant mor- taht> increased b> nearly 50 percent m a ~r in some of Boston· poore t neighborhoods. while infant deaths "'ere declining na11onw1de. The stud> hoked the increase to changes in federal welfare standards that cut funding for pregnant "'omen mothers and children and eliminated 24.000 Massachusetts mothers from the Med1ca1d rolls Rosemarie Williams. 25. a mother of four who laves an Boston's Dorchester section. 'told the story of a high school fnend who had JUSt quit her JOb when she got pregnant Williams scolded her to stop smoking and dnnkin& so much ~er. . "I said. 'Your baby isn't going to make it into this world.'" Williams recalled. "She rcall) d1dn 't have money to ao Lo the c1101c. She ~ad she went down to the welfare office and they ref used to give her Medicaid. So he said. 'Well 1f you aren't aoina to help me. forget it. Who needs doctor's care? The baby will he just fine."' i-Ona 'Old day in February. the child was t11lborn. first year in five of Boston's poorest neighborhood. compared wtth 56 in 1981 . according to the Harvard study Professor Penny Feldman. who surveyed five-neighborhood · health clinics for the study. said the infant mortality rate had "skyrocketed" to 21 per 1.000 hve btrths 10 1982 from 14. 7 per 1.000 the year before. More current figures are not available. Nauonally. infant mortalttydedm- ed slightly dunng the same period - from 11 . 7 percent to 11 .2 percent. There was no breakdown for inner cities and other geographical areas. Feldman also reported sharp de- chnes 1n pediatric and obstetnc visits to neJghborhood health clinics Smee December. the state has augmented the federal Women. In- fants and Children food supplement program. whlth provtdes milk. cheese. CJ&S, cereal and other h1gh- prote1n food to about 55.000 preg- nant and nuning mothers in Massa- chusetts Proper ~atal care 1s encouraged at neighborhood health c11mcs. where women seldom are turned away for 1nab11tty to pay. Nonetheless. Angela NLcoletti. head of the tecn·age pregnancy unit at Brigham and Women's Hospital. said that in the past s1x to 12 months. her staff has noticed a nse in the number of teen-agers who ~1t uo.111 the last tnmester of pregnancy to seek mcd1· cal care Some complain they ha ve had difficulty getting Med1eiud. he ~\d. • "A good percentllgc of the pregnant patients do no> start their prcnat I care until late in their pregnancy. They haven't been takina their vit· amins. they aren't eating properly." said Celina Wright. operation man· ager of the Wh1tt1er tr ct Health Clinic in Roxbury. where visit~ ha~c dcchncd by a third in the pa l 18• months. F.arUer this month. Ro ton Mayor Ra} mond Flynn announced a s 150.000 arant to hire outru h ~or~c~ from &he.cit ·.s puorest neigh· borhoOds to locate and educate high· n kprc n ntwomcnwhodon·t h the ho p1tal unt1l 1t is too late. SANTA ANA• 1540 E. Warner• (714)557-0611 t&etWeenGrana& NeWPOrt FWV extton DY r ~1 MISSION VllJO • 28191 Mar9uertte Prl<Wy. • <714)495·3252 ieerw crown van & A\/erv P1CWV1 Premature deli,encs and lov. birth weights are the mo t common cau of infant death amona the poor - problem a scx1ated stall ticall)' with tmpropcr .diet. alcohol and drui abusr. smo ing and u:en·a pre • nam:y •• llccording to Or. Gcor Lamb, 1n1C'al director of<'ommun1· ty Health rv1cc t Bo ton Caty Hospnal. Infant mortality na1tonw1dc tt 1 dechncd 'h1rpl 1n the pa t 20 )Hr , althou h'h)a k infant ~ 4 v.ctk to I year ('Ont1n1.1 10 d1"' Ill almo 1 "Wee timate that about nne·thirJ ot the women '-'C will kttcn 111 nc \! additional rv1cc . We plan to outfit u1 un pubh~ health nul'\C to coun· ~1 th ¥.omen about drintin and OTHER STO SIN: WIST LOS ANC LIS, PASADENA, NOllTN MOLL YWOOD. TORRANC IC VALLIY I SAN otKO J • .... 1llt. .... ~Tll009ilt9S t I ,,_,"' .... ,..£, I __, "W't -V. &lnM\""()llOQ,,. ,,.. • .. • ,c; ....,.""""~ft.~ ,, •f'Oir• f\ -4 :J' ,, double the rate of white babic . • ln 19 2. 6 b3b1 ,lted w11h1n their .. mok1ng. bout gooo nutnuon, about what premature labor feels hkc.~· I m1> id • ' Billions at stake ln attempt to k p Mississippi aligned luted raver. But he kJd)' 1d mt oq,d could l'he M1)StS'i1pp1 as hc1n kepi on com of new M1 1 1pp1path10 the coune by the Oki Ra er Con tr I Gulf. 1 le pofl of Ney; Orie n nd Structure. a 2S·)ear-old, 6S·foot· B toil Rouge would not be left high long dam hualt into the Yie t bank of nd di), but in t~d maghr handle th.e Mtss1ss1pp1. ll alloy;s 0 pcrccn1 C\en bag&er h1Jl) lhan they do now'. By BlLL CRIDER 0.1 Ote ilow to P<i '> t~rough the old En inecr~ said at ~ould be a Of 'th A11oclated PrH, , . river bed Jnto the Atchatalaya. rclau,cl) simple man~r to maintain a •The new addikon to Old R1"er as a 50-foof·deep channel all the· way 10 I MME.SPORT. La (AP)-Mmy S l44.5 m\lhon au~ihar~ • ontrol B:tton Rouge. 243 miles from 1hc cnatnccrs thinl thcy'"c got 1t made 1f !itructurc: -a spc:c11lli1ed c.l.ani with Gulf, in.,tead of the p~nt 40.foot the Mississippi River will just &h:ive m ponderous g;ites. each 7S ft'd high depth. 1tsclftoracouplcmoreyca.rswbcnlhc and 62 feet wide. The nvcr coveted b} thr M1sm- weathet l!i wet and northern snow i., Engineer'\ ior the Army orps o( s1pp1 is pronounced "Ah<hafl-llh·h- melttna:Thcy arc :rbout h:rlf finished Enaaneers !la) Old River ontrol yuh."' It tl> made up of the flow from buildinJ a massive au)(ihan dam ~tructure. beefed up by the au:uliar; the ltcJ River and the 30 percent of near here LO keep the mighty M1~1s strucfure. will pre~ent any change an the Massi )ipp1 ·allowed throueh the sippi from changing course. the nver's course indctinatel)'. Old Ri\.'er dam. • The river is struaglana 10 cut .Hov.e"er. the LSlJ 'audy pr~dt<.'l\ "The Old Raver <>tructurc P"C the through an old river bed aero s a that the nver eventually w11l win c~-rp of Engmeen a fit in 1973 The narrow neck of land and take over the Work on the auxrhary g~s on 24 .. 1 I b 1 d A~chafalaya River for a 140,malc run· hour a 'da} seven d.a)s a v.cd.: ,. ts ,,s'i pp1 <;eoured o es un er. it h 0 If fM D. · E ' · and '('ollapsed a wall which had tO t ~ Q 0 CXJCO at Morgan {it), omango lguezab:ll, rcsade!'\t Cf\&1· · dirCcled the flow of water. . La .• instead of the 312 meandering ncer. figures the stnx:turcs wall stand • males It now takes past New Orleans. for I 00 'tear<, to keep a throttle hold on To b-.."d' up th3t crippled flank, the Such a shockan& rearrangement of Old Man River. corpsdumpcdJOO,OOOtons,ofbrolcn the nver's course would. amona other "Of course. it's a big mer and )OU rock on tt. o~er 31 .000 cubic yard'i of things, cau~ b1lhons of dollars an . can onl) do so much. But as long as rub~I) grout was poured into the d<£mage. Congress 1s will.mg to fund additaonal cav1t1es ~n~ath th~~foun.~- .. Some 140,000 peoplt-who hve in things as needed. we will be able to . $4 • .l m1lhon an repair$. _ J.hc Atchafal~ya s.m .would-he _Q · · ppi.;· he u1d , n:a'1.ditiW1L ....... ...,._..~..,""k_.t.M.l.&&0"""-';.+;.~ displaced A Lou1s1ana State L naver-It ta s a lot oftoncreteand steel to got the aux a liar)' structure. being built s11y stud~a1d that Mo.cpn_Dl}. deal 1th ..!h.!L u.!!.Q!.ed1nablc on the d wnstrcam side of the -Old Houma. Thibodau)( and Raceland. st re lroifecting water rrom 31 one. It wa deemed necessary bct'ause am ngothcrtowns. would be isolated states and two Canadian provinces. the old structure. which once could and flooded. the M1ss1ss1pp1 can develop w9thstand a difference of 36 feet East-west highways would be ruin-enormous force If you stood on the between the height of the swollen ed, and new swamp areas cre\ited. levee above Old River a1 full flood M1ss1ss1pp1 and the height of the The salty Gulf waters would push <;tage. up to three mallton cubic feet of -\tchafala)'a. 1s now reduced to a about 250 mtks up the present water would rush by every second. ma)(amum of22 feet M1ss1s!.1pp1 Raver as far as Baton hemmed 1n between the levees. Mean\.\ hale. an 85-foot picket boat Rouge, shouldenng an against the The two-year LSU stud)' by remains on constant guard. read> to weaker flow .Salty water would be professors Ralphael G. k.azmann and dash out onto the riveno head off an\. !Ough on ell) water systems .and on Da' 1d Johnson predicted an 1980 that runaway barges headed for the old mdustnes that now use the rt\.er for the nver Wl~.t switch routes .. wi1~1n structure. It as feared that an ac•1dent. water and as a sewer: . the hfeume of an)one graduating even the impact of a loose barge A new fresh water <,oun:c ""ould from h1$h school that year -despite ""1rhng downstream. could "eakcn ha~e to be found for the one m1lhon the au)(ahal')· structure ··we ha' en"t thl' structure enough to give thl.' re~adents of New Orleans. who now changed our mind'>·· Kazmann said Mis!llS'itppi the leverage it necd'i to dnnk punfied ""ater from the pol-recentl~ bcgan"teanng it loose Old horse haven Peagy KJngman of Bolllster pet., Tater.· a 20 old ho~. a•eratlng a&e 28. come from 36-year-old Shetland, at her retirement the San P'ranct.co area and are owned by home for honea. whlch ahe bellevea ta the arbanltea. Ktnpan off en •tonier llfe for only •acb ha•en in the country. Mo.t of the their •teed.a on her 2,000-acre ranch. ~----~--~------~--------~~~------__;..--______ ___ Jerry's t~.lethons have come long way Muscula r Dys trophy even t may be n ation 's most powerful single outpouring <?_f ch arity that went untele' 1sed because the hroadcast had sw1tchec.J to local ":, stations ... E.vcry dame is accounted for .. By MITCHELL L,\NDSBERG Of Tbe Assoclated Press NEW YORK -Jell) Lewis was a young goofball comic and telev 1s1on had only two colors. It was 1956. the first year Lew1s was host of· the. Muscular D)strophy \ssoc1at1on· telethon an Ne"" York C tl). It ap-. pearcd on one tele\. t<;JOn '>talion and roused $500.000. Lewis 1s still a goofball v.hcn 'the spmt stnkes. but all the rest has changed, Jn 1981. its best .>ear. the Jell) l..(wis•Labor Da> Telethon was beamed fro111 Lao; Vegas to 210 television stations and re~·cived pledges ofS3 I 5 m1lhon. Alona the wa). the tel et.hon has endured controvers) and foul-ups. Lewis has had some pentous pcT'SO'Tlal times. including a hean attack Dec. · 31 . 1982. and double-bypass ~heart surgery. But he and the assoc1at1on have turned the telethon mto what may' be 1he most powerful c;ingk outpounng of chant) in the nation They have reshaped the wa\. Ameri- cans gJve. ''MDA was a pioneer." said fred Schnaue. \.tCe president of the Amen- can Assoc1at 1on of Fund-Raising ,, Counsel. a trade group for pro- fessao,al fund-raisers "Thev've been at telethons JU'it about longer than anyone. and the) 've got 11 prctt) well worked out I thmk the MD.\ Tele- thon and Labor Day arc JUSI about synonymous.·· This YVlr's 21-hour telethon '' the 19th. broadcast O\ er the Labor Da:r weekend and features another all-star cast 1t 1s being broadcast from Caesars Palace 10 Las .v egas to 194 telev1s1on stations an the LI 01te<l States and cable tele' 1s1on an Canada "Our goal." said telethon coord1· nator Jerry Weinberg, "1s alwa)s SI more than last year .. In 1983. the telethon had pledges of SJ0.691.627. The Muscular D)stroph) o\ssoe1a- t1on was founded in I 950 to help combat a range of muscle-<iestro} ing diseases tbat fell under the general heading of muscular d)\troph}. The same }ear. United Cerebral Pals) ' · held the first telethon. MD\ follo""ed about t"o }ears later. The organization found its \tar in 1956. when Lewis began pla)tng host tor a sen cs of Thanksgl\ mg telethons an New York. They lasted un11l 1959 fading mostly because of scheduling conflicts. But Muscular Dystrophy offi cials began planning something nc~· a national telethon. In 1966. thcv held the fim Jerry Lewis LabQr-Da\ Telethon on station WNEW an Ne~ York. It expanded to fiH~ stations 1n 1968. 20 1n 1969. 65 1n 1970. 120 an 1971andh1tapeakof2131n1977-79. The stauons were a blend of affiliate'> from the maJOr networks and inde- pendent<>. Through 11 all. Le" 1s was lOn'>lant· h before the camera: emouonal. corn}. funm. "1th a coterie ol superstar guests But ""hat ma:r ha\.e been the most dramatic moment came off camera. an I 97M when Le""'" announced receiving 2" letters que'· ttonmg whether he had been paid. -1 rece1,e nothing from the tcle· thon. ·he ~1d 1n an emouonal six~'h , The question comes up each year at telethon time. and MDA offic1als are quick to note that neither Le"1s nor an> of the stars on the telethon are pa ad. • Some qucsuon!> remain about the assoc1a11on's fundraisang an~ its use of funds. Two ,_a)or --.hdog organila· lions monitor chant1es One the Ph1lanthroptc \dv1sol) Sen ice of the C ouncll of Better Business Bu- reaus. !1\ts the \10A as among a m1nont} oforganllattons meeung tis standards. The other.· the r-.auonal Chant} Information Board. 5a}S thl· assoc1a11on does not meet ats stan· dards Om· standard b' which chantac\ arc Judged as the" perct"ntage of their contnbut1onc; eaten up-1n fund· raising expenc;es. fhe NCIB con· 'itder<, an)thing O\.er 30 percent to be C\Cesc;1ve ·kl 1981. M DA said 24 percent of tts contnbuuons we(lt 19 fund-ra1s1ng- lcss than c;ome other large heahh- relatcd chanues ltke the ;.\mencan < ancer Socaet} But the board said Muscular DH- troph) failed to include under "fund- raasang" some expenditures 1t had h<,tcd under -pubhc health educa- uon .. With those expenses included. its fund-raising rosts rose to 32 percent of contnbutions Weinberg defendc-d the assoc1a- uon. sa) ang the fund-ra1s1ng dispute arose because of different inter- pretations of matenal that v.11s educa- uonal ·but also designed tQ bring an donauons Wise-~racking guide. off er~ fun r~ad for college bound 'Inside ~coop ' on student concerns looks at: Favorite drinks. best pa rties , sex scen e • By LEE MITGANG Of The A11oclallon P re11 NEW YORK-The ~aal e"ent of the )'car at the Univcrs1t) ot Alaska i'i "Cheapo Steczo Night." Camegae- Mellon leads the nauon 1n computer nerds. Radical politic h"cs at Uni- versity of Wiscon'itn, while sc~ as all but dead at Oral Roberts. Other college auid'es may be con- tent with stodgy fact~ like arndc-poant avcraaes and the number of hooks m ahc school library. But not "Lisa Bimb3ch's Colleac Book." a w1sc- cnacking, occa aonall y X-raacd auadc to 186 collcac campu\Cs ~he has visited o\·cr the I I 21f: year!\. In add1t1on to essa~s on each campus. a table ltst'i mmt popular mruor (poliucal science nt \vt"llC' le). business at Unavcrs1t> of "Jebraska), famous alumni. ~st Jnd wor.t dorms. best pizza and the poltucal ch mate There are also several broad l'S\a~S on campus life. On .sex· "In ac· cordancc with the born-again con- servatism sweeping our country'-; colleges, se~ -rent SC\ -doing 11 l:kfore the engagement nn has been t11ed. has fallen off somewhat." Another essay, "Mondo Granola· Whatever Happened to H1pp1e<1," answers that qu'esaion with a look at Rttd Colkgc in Ore on. and Bclo1t College 10 Wa~on-;m Sa)s one Bdoit Ena.Ji h professor. 'Lot\ of people stay here forc"er. They lc:<'p on lndtan mound " • In a "lm of Lms" near the end ot the SI S-pagc paperback olume, Bambach bcsto\\ laurtb and dJns. 8cnntngton Coll c in Vermont, he found. h s the be t food, Unavcr· The 27·)'Ca~-old author, who edited the best· cllan1 "Official PttPP" Hanaoook" four )car 110. claim her la te t book ofTe~ 1he "1M1dc oop" on tbe thin tudcnt reall\ care about: favontc drink (hcer ·at the Unh-crsit)' of labam and mo~t other campu , ahe ··care CoJder" of cranberry JU ice and ~odla at m1th Collt e), t pani • the dr and • alcohol itu uon, and the sex enc 'ill of Hawaii the t. 1 h ·• catc't loo~1n . campu •· ~ the ' or bot!\ tf.tighU and -amona other ral tora. he book' J'Ut\hC llOn date IS ptembcr 24. · B1mbach' 1u1d lip into riou 1'l ~ t1ltcn cnouih to [\ c a re: I pu~ lor the collcic bound. In l1i u 1 v al b1hty nf f'!ltkang, tht' qu ht~ of dom, nd f()Qd . nd ,Y.hetha hbenl rt1 1 valued on VAnJ!U Un1JlU$ , lh\'boo ma) hClJl somc.4lbi:scnts linil thr n ht \ChOOI nivc~tty f a,hin ton un r: up. Cornell. • Ur0\\1\ U vcrsu~. B1m ~ alma mater. as rated-with ,,U)be mid nofb a"-••moSlpopul r;·· The "cul t tud nu" re to found t n1v~tt) of hfom11 t nta BarNf-a and nruna tc \Jn1H th gu1Jc. lhc lie:st p l)' at the lJn1' a. nd ti\ u. t· ... . Some disabled catizens have com- plained that the telethon ·1>0rtra)ed them an a {ondeKending wa). using pity to put the nation's heartstrings. "It as very difficult tor a disabled adult to go out and look for work the day after t~e Jerry Lewis telethon." said .\nna Fay of Yonkers.NY .. \.1ce president of the Ame~ oahtion of C111zens with D1satJiht1es-:-She saKi dasabkd people "arc portra}ed not as independent adults, but as children an need ofnununngand care .. '"Ob\.IOUSl!f. 14(' disagree "llh them:· said Weinberg "l'\e told tho-;c people O\er and o'er again to ~atch the telethon." fhe images portra,cd. he 1ns1'>ted. ::tre o'er· "'helming.I) pC>Sllt~e. ' .\nothc-r 'uggcs110n that \1uscular D:-stroph~ officials reject 1s that the telethon. b) '>pawning 1miunors..has been too SUlTC<;\ful for 11s own good "The quc-st1on that comes to m' mind is JU't ho, ... long these agencies can find telethons to be a 'aablc method." <>aid MarJone He11bnhk of the 1'.ta110nal ( hant\ lnformauon Board .. , .. ., ~e111ng· prctt) c.:0J')'l- pet1t1' C' . But Rill Behanna of thl' .\ ( "ael\Cn Co .. "'htlh rates tclev 1s1on program!>, is among tho"<' "ho doubt that the Jen) t <'"is telethon -\Cell 11136 m1llton houl\Cholds last )car - 1<; in an' danger. He tncd a ltttle qu11. "'Name t\.\O telethon<> .. he said. "and one of them can't be. Muc;.cular O\stroph) I can·t thank ol another telethon:· The km u~·• Labor Da' Tele- thon. said Behanna "1s the Mi<>\ .\menca of chant.able telethons .. 0 You can "'8'0f in ...Sure ,,, th•· UntVersitv of WashnQlon 0 The Yl\allest c•f.Cerl. portions atf' S('fYf>d Al M ~ .... (;oi(>"I' O T~ most ~1'1rv•' hairdos •" t Bt9nam vounq Univt•r .... av 0 Tn.t"e •e gun rad1•" !he dorms of the Un1vet~y OJ~ ,.,.,..,,._ Jerry Lewis holda the 1975 Muscular Dy•trophy A•- aociation poater boy, Paul Hawkin• of Dillon, Mont. Thi• year'• MDA telethon l• the 19th broadcut. with a goal of raialna more than lut year'• $30,69"1.627: RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, llC. ror Thi RHt Of , .. lf• 1922 HARIO II.VO .. com MESA -S41115' The Pros ' Since 195 l Mi1kcan appease peppe_ry palate PHILADELPHJA (AP) -Pal.a peppem3 v.1th flames l>fOmpo:d b potent pe~ can ~ be appeased Y.tth a plen11fuJ pounng of· whole mill. aceord1ng to rtstarchcn · '>l)C'Ctalizang in burning questions "h works better than v.ater, salt, crackers or an)thing else ... Mananoc Gilleuc. a McCormick Co. ~­~rcher. said T uesda} at a meeting of ahe mencan Chemical Society. But Gillette. a nutnttt1onist '4llh the spice and herb rompan} v.orking to mJect more sc1en11fic prec1s1on into the pepper business. 1sn"t sure v.'hy. 01lleuc said she has developed a method to measure· pepper potenC) more accurately than a panel of .. bland .. testers The kc\ she 1d 1s to ··calibrate .th,,e tongue." he said she has a panel oft c;tan h' ta.sung a prepare-0 sam s~nthette pepper wnh a . !(n w14 unchang.ang rating of five out of a po s1ble 15 -or ~0.000 .. scov Jes." the unat of pepper heat de' 1 in ~I~ bv a_..A"lan apt I) named W L ov11ic. From there. the pm-lei tastes peppc(\ sampl~ and rates them against the S) nthet1c sample ''The cost of red peppers 1s dirtttl) rt'lated to ho" hot the" arc. The mort tht') bum. the more v.c pa~ forthCm." she said T Mo• ,. •e yov •tee post presen! ond lvluro ono ~··• vou odv•<;. on O•e ,,,o r •ge on :1 hus ness 650·7231 870 W. 19th ST READINGS $3.00 WITH THIS AO JAMES A. LENNERTZ~ M.D. ANNOUNCES THE REOPENING Of HIS OFFICE FOR FAMILY PRACTICE IN HUNllNGTON BEACH Office Hours By Appointment (714J 847-8544 Early Bird Dinner -specials 16.9S Prime Rib or Fresh Fish C ompltte D nner with cho ce of •. soup or UJacJ ~ dess~rt -·~~ , • A to 6 PM ff$r>!an? 1 1111 -·w"kl .: 801 E1 8AL80A 673-772'6 . , ' • -I REAGAN & Co. ~ ~~~= --~ ~-~-_, Reagan' takes Rose Garden -, __ . out on the road W 1'SHINGION -Pl!c~i~IAl Re apn doesn't plan 10 stay in the Ro$C Garden durina the fall campa1a.n. but be is takin& his Rost Garden with him. • While Reaaan "-Ill be seen across the nation on thc'evenina television nc~. supposed!) talking to th~ Amencan people in front of carefully chosen backdrops. he will be effec- tively isolated from the Ji"e·and·take ef real-eampaign1ns or ftom-qutt- tions he miaht be asked by the travelina press. . In the process of overprotecung their front-runner. Reagan 's White House managers have-co-opted the Sccrtt Service for purpose that have nothina to do with the president's secunty, reduced r~poners to the unw1lhng role of props and con- temptuous!} treated their president as a communicator in constant need ofa keeper Wh en a president tQl vels. he 1s accompanied b) a small and rotating "pool" ofreponers r~resentina each wameni of the media. The system rarely produces profound dialogue but docs provide a framework for day·to-da) e:\chanaes between the candidates. Often. a c.and1date's answer to a sens1t1ve question reveals more about h1~ feehngs or .motives than the ~rcfull) scnpted response prepared by the candidate's staff. In Reagan's case. his answers to many questions have beery va.luable. He is. on the whole. mot"~ inchned to talk candidly than many of his aides. and he openly endorsed Nicaraguan "freedom fighters" at a time his spokesmen were pussyfooting around the issue of U.S. involvement agamst the Sandinista government. There are man)' other such examples But Reaaan·s prochvll) for ans"'enng quesuons makes his staff nervous. ln some cases. lhey" are concerned that he "'ill dive in over his head on an issue on which he 1s 111- prepared L suall). as• one White House official puts at. the concern 1s s1mpl~ that a fonhnght ansv.er v. ill "eradicate the theme of the da)" decided an advance b) the staff So. special effort 1s being made to keep Reaga n awa> from the press in an election that his managers beheve 1s Reagan's tb lose. One of the things his staff 1s doing to prevent Reagan from losing is keeping the press pool out of the president's limited hearing range. As White House correspon- dent Maureen Santini of the As- sociated Press observes, "We're being kept fanher awa)' than before. As a result. we have not been able to ask questions." But tbe Whne House staff wants to be cenain that visuals of Reagan are first-rate Last week at Goddard Space Flight Center. photographers were allowed to approach the presi- ~ Lou CANNON ~ when1't'CS1dents arc~ tznlC'tS of assassins and in an admin1strat1on whose leader was senously wounded iQ an attempt on has hfe. The Secret ~rv1ce. w1del) respected for it s professionalism. acted courageously and wisel> v.-hen Reagan was uuured But the White House staff 1s trading on this reputation and damaa.ing 1t when 1t d1vens the Secret Service from protecting the president to provide what ABC '\e"'s correspon- dent Sam Donaldson calls ''pohllcal secunty ... This happened recentl> in \41ssoun, where the Secret Service allowed Reagan to shake hands with strangers but closed 1n quickly on reponers who tned to ask him a quesuon. The staff wu particular!)' sens1uve al this time because of Reagan's 111-starttdJoke about bomb- ing the RuSS1ans. When the staff wants reponers close to Reagan, 1t 1s a different stor). The Secret Service parted like the Red Sea to let the press pool th.rough 1 n Hoboken, N.J .• when Reagan's ad- visers wanted him seen appealing to Italian-American voters in a Roman Catholic church. All of these reponers have security clearances and passes issued by the Secret Service and are sanitiud by frequent walks through metal detectors. "The> take their cue from (Deput} Chief of Stall) Mike Dea,er and Nancy Reagan and the others at the top," said Donaldson. frequenth point man fo r the press corps 1n asking quesuons that need to be asked. "When the staff v.ants re· porters close. the} 're close and. v.hen the staff doesn't thefre not. Thl'~ have taken the Rose Garden on the road." All of th rs should ~troublesome even to Americans who distrust the press. Reagan holds news conferences less frequentJy than an}' modern president. He sees fev.er people than most. presidents and delegates more authority than an)-of them. He 1c, the most protected by his staff During a period when he 1s sup- posedly.~king has case to the Ameri- can people. Reagan 1s being de- liberately isolated b)" a staff that wants to take no nsks. How isolated woµld he be in a second term v.hen he and his staff would be be} ond the reach of the 'oters., dent while writers were kept out of REAGAN ISM OF THE \\EEK quest1on1ng range. When the presi-Explal'tung his scholastic defic1en"es dent leaves for Camp Da' id. as m) in mathematics to two students at colleague David Hoffman v.-rote re-Jefferson Junior High School in centh in the Washington Journalism Wastungton last "'eel.:. the president Re' iev.. engines on the pres1dent')J said, "lf,l confessed lo )'OU how far I \:fanne helrcopter are re,ved so was behind lh of }'OU in these Reagan cannot hear quesuons. examples. mud knov. wh\. we have a The most questionable tactic 1s budget deficit us1 ng the Secret Se~ ice for non- 'iet unt) purposes This 1s a touchy Lou Cannon 1.S a 1yadlc•t~d quesuon for reponers to raise in an columnist. --.! -, WHY ALL 1liE 1=\JSS ABOOT ANmoGYNY AND SHIFrlNG SEX~P, .. •. YOU STILL SEEM PRE 1'I '{ w.cact1LINE -.- BUT l~TIIE GIRL~ PREP. Small businesses deserve bit of a boost from· the state By RICHARD KATZ ( aliforn1a's small business 1.:om- munll} rejoiced when Gov Dcu- kmeJian announced that the "elcome mat was out once apin for business I reJoaced along with them as l. too. saw the need for California to reverse Its ant1-bus1ncss amtude Lnfonunatcl}. the ne"'s 1s not all good. It seems. "'h1lc California businesses are given a v.elcomc mat. foreign muh1nat1onal corporations are being &1'.)n the kt} to the Golden State Recent I\ this became ob' 1ous With the htess1 ngs of the governor, the Scnall' Revenue and Taxation Commmee killed an anempt to encourage more private sector mone} for small. minority, and women- OVtQed businesses. .My 0AB3561 would allov. an in- vestor in a small business to deduct the purchase of stock in that bu sines\ from hi s or her California personal income tax . .\ r ali(prn1a small twsr• ncss could raise up to.a quarter of a m1lhon dollars b) u&1ng this plan - monc\ lO hare ( alifornians and to e'<pand our econom) Current state pohcy allows a busi- ness to "'nte off a $50.000 loss \\.hen the business fails. Wh> wait until the business fails? Why 'i'e a tax incen- ll\ e to mvcst in a losing proposi uon'! Let's use a little common sense and pro' 1de thl' incen1ive up front and encourage people to in"~sl in our \late'<; small business. The Senate Commmee's action "as panicularl) ironic because onl~ moments earlier, leg1slauon sup- poned br. Go,·. De-ukmcjian g1V1ng a $200 m1llton HI'< brt>ak to foreign multinational corporations "'as passed Don't gel me wrong. I am a big supporter of en<"ouragmg foreign 1n\estment in California. But here "e arc ignoring the mo!lt \ital. contribut- 1n1t &cctor of our economv -and "pursuing a golden goose" whic h ma) ur ma) not I~) an egg in Cahforn1a. Untonunately this attitude 1s notb1ng new to California's ~mall business men and women. lt's not difficult to sec "h> either. Foreign bus1ne!ls plays "the gan1e.'' the' grease the machine -and I guess )OU can't fauJt them for wanung a "fair'' return on their 1n,estment. On the other hand. the profits of the mullanauonals go back across the ocean They don't pa\ for our roads. our schools. our parks or our 1a1ls. · The governor need to be put on nouce First things fir:st! h's oka> to coun business from around the world. but we'"e got a lot of hard- v.orkrng men and women n'ht here 1n Cal1fomia who have paid their dues -they deserve at least an equar amount of respect and auent1.0n. Rkbard K•tl Is 1tate llB- semblymu from tbe 31tb District. China's .most eligible Slilith sought to squelch_ has 36 legs , 3 soµnds probe of Barbie's U .. s .. ties Our toH' and \\ ar man notes the '\osebleeds are more common 111 - modern }'Ouns lad~ in China n.ov. has the wanter. \\ l\SHI'-GTO!\-.\ttorm:) Gen- more ~)-so in p1ck1ng a husband eral \\-ilham French Smith tned to , .\mong the new guidelines: He must Q What do the Japant'sc me<.1n h' pre,ent a Jusuce Department 1n- •, have "J6 legs .. and "three sounds." "a pillow book"? ,estigauon of the close ties betv.een That means he has tu come up with \ A sexy \Olume Y.1th crot11.: L \ intelligence agencies and Klau'> hoth bedroom and II\· ang room pictures. Am told man) a lapane'l' Barbu: the infamous Nazi v.ar u1m1 · funi11ure plus a TV set. a cassette man habitually keeps such litl'r<.1tun.· nal, according to the former official player and a good camera with a under his pillow. Correspondl'Ot\ \a~ "'ho headed the Barbie 1n-.cst1gat1on shutter click. 1t's a perfectly respectabk 1rJd1t1un Smith changed his mind onl} after Q Who reall~ was the last of the \4oh1cans., A Your quef) 1s a httle previous. .\bout 200 Moh1cans still sun.1ve. 35 of them 1n Uncasv11le. Conn Can tell )OU the last Mohican who actuall~ ,poke Mohican however. Fidelia I 1eldin1. She died an 1908. E.l'h side of)'our brain not onl~ ha~ its own job 10 do. but each has its own fcehna. con~iousness and per· sonalit ... Or so~>· the e"pens. That'\ 1ntcrtsi1ng. 1 f true What happen'> wtl\:n the side\ d1~11tt., "Lc1'' take a nap," purr' Lcfl "You nap." snaps Right, "I'm ao1na out tor a Ix-er." with a purpose. "'eeks of growing pressure from the pres\ and members of ( ongress - and a telev1s1on networ~ reporter's threat to go on the air with embarra\\· in@ question\ about the J U\llC'c D1.·· partment's reluctance to look 101t1 Barh1c\ '°'' rclattoiKhip "'ith 1 •. , Surely you'\e hcJrd ol <)ul'\'O Emma. She was 1hc fir'il QUt'en to' 1\lt the United States On \ug ~ oJ >!ht> From the ~andv.1Ch hland\ no" Hawa11 .. Q H<-''" mulfl~" tlw Pl'ntagon·'i phone b11l'1 .\.SR 1 milli11n ,1 \\'J1 Your hone marrcm lllrll\ out I million rl'd hlood cell' Pt'r M"cond"l · intelligence · · The rc'>ulting invcsllptwn di~· clo\cd tha1 \J S official\ had rrhu1t- ccH:irb1c After \\'orld Wur 11 and arranged h11, escape to Boll' ia in IQ I f.'pclled last ~car, Rart't1e " nov. in r ranee aw-amna trial lor ··lnmc$ ga1n\t humanit)." L.M. BoJd i • J)'adlr11td I he \ton o( mnh'~ last·mtnut colamnilt. dccmon to· authonte the 1n,e!lt1ga ' 11on "told in a forthcoming book b) JACK ANDERSON I BILL HARVEY Ximed traffl·c · .ljghts:. :when? I've• got more mail about PCH and traffic light synchr6niiation. The subJect of traffic hght synchron- ization seems io get more people up in arms than an) other that I've wnuen about. And I think. with very good· reasor). A fe"' nights ago. I had occa5ion to dAve Bushard Street south from Westminster Boulevard .. h was at about 11 :30 p.m. and traffic was very hghl. I was fo rced to stop at tvery traffic hght from Westminster to Banning Street. I maintained. as nearly as possible, a speed between 3S and 40 miles per hour. Still. regular as clockwork. as I approached an inter- section that was controlled by a traffic hght, the light turned ydlow. This. f riends.,js a da11gerous situ· a lion~ · I feM._thai the universal inclination in a situation of this son is to put your foot in u and tf). to beat the hght. l could have possibly done that, Jiven the conditions and. ifl missed and the hght turned red. who'd be the wiser'.> After all. ll was almost midnight. and there was no other traffic. But. suppose 1l we~ 2:30 p.m. instead'? And. supJ>06C that there was someone who was late for an appoint- ment waiting at the red light on the cross street Maybe this someone 1s watching to see when the llaht turns ycl19w for me, so that he ca.n 6e sure to shoot across that 1.D.1crsect1on as soon as the hibt is ~recn for him. After all. he's late for his appointment. Maybe he misjudges, and jumps the light Just a httJe. At the very same ume. I'm accelerating, trying to get across under the yellow. The result? Insurance company statistics. Admittedly. both the other guy and . myself would be bending the law a little, me by speeding. up for the yellow. and he by ant1c1patmg the green. The fact remains that the current system of traffic hght synchron- 1zat1on encourages drivers to bend the law. My car 1s a standard shift Each time I stop, I have to sh1ft through four gears. That gets~ pain after JUSl a little while. So. what can be done about the snuauon? I called the city of Hunt- ington Beach for some answers. The Public Works Department, to be exact. I talked to a man there who, believe it or not, is JUSt as concerned as you and I. . · The problem stems from a lack of money. I mentioned that I thought the problem could be alleviated by timing the lights. He said that requires a very accurate clock. I mentioned the watch on my wnst that loses three seconds a month. and cost about $50. He agreed there are inexpensive timing devices. but that because we have such a radical difference in traffic now from one day to the neitt. our system requires winng all or t~ 'lights together rather than separate umers. ' Radical d1fferenc,p? Sure. Much more traffic on warm da ys. Every- body wants to go to the beach. Well. what's the answer'.> Good news and bad news. Thin&'I are already-in the works, at lea t a much u there is money for. Public Works in Huntington Beach upccts th~t aJI of the lights on Edinger (w1thm the city limits) will be synchronized by January 1985. The bad news? Brookhurst won't be synchronized unul June of '85, with Warner two years from now and GOiden West th~c years from now. And this is only Hununaton Beach; only four streets in Huntinaton Beach. Maybe ourvandC'hddrcn will have S)nchroni.zed liahts. The gentleman I talked to did.~m "cry much aware of the problem. and seemed aenuinely COD<'Cmed as v.cll. s he put it "I have to drive hcrt, lCIO " And he asked a rivor of me. ~ ukcd that I publi ha phone number.· one that anyone who finds 1 problem can call. Than like li&ht that tum direcll) from arcco lo red, v.·uh no H. L. hhwerti ur-\ • lla.n Ryan .. former dir«10r ot lhc Ju\t1cc Dcpartmenl' Office of Specanl ln\e 11,u1ons. M> auM>c:111c Luc-ene l•ana<lo ha n proof of thr bool -:·Quiet Nc1 hbor Pr0\- rcutin1 Na11 War nm1nal' an \mwca" -which "111 be publt\ht'd this fall In Hucourt , RnHe Jo\an0\'1~h • ellow. It t thlt are out, thing 1ke " that. he number 6-.S.OI , That number is only for Hunt· 1ngton Stach. I upcct. 1n the n r future, to be tal'king to lhc pu he orks d partmen of other citi 1n our count)', and m )'be hnn well I'll kctp ou potted, Pt1nlc ZJnl ~-Q'"O EC.IOI Tom Telt ~ t. Ofy l:CllOr Crel9 lheff flPQl'f• (OllOI I hc-attomc\ ~cneral "h:id '1tc1dcd thrrr would bC no tn\~Sllgtl11on •• ... f •• c:ommco1 . J1C'l1 11dtnoo IJ • ) dlrtttd tolam11i t. r/ .. llaru ... .. . -'\ . • 'I\ ANN LANDERS Al TV LISTINGS Al ---·------··COMICS A '10. , Legal terms deadl--___,.._ OCC· Li_brary ·11 'book reView CHICAGO (AP) -If you can't figure out what )'Our lawyer or doctor is Sl)ing. don't blame you~lf. Such profession Is ma) not want )OU to understand them for fear their . ex~ni~ .. won't 1¥ valut'd et\ough jf people understand 1t," panelists told an Amencan Bar A sociation worlil- shof.. •• 've never been bothered by doetors• failure to communicate -as long as the> act nd of whatever It is 1. have," said David MchnkofL.---- aw SC oo) prOl'essor and the author of several works on the language of the law. · ·~lt's a little hke that wuh lawyer .... " he con tin e , "as Iona as clients iet the results t ey want.'' MelinkofT ta ted Laun and the rigors or profess• al school as the two major sources of communication problems between lawyers and clients. He said Latin. which shaped much of the English language and most of the surviving code of laws, was not "inappropriate 700 years ago, when the profession staned." But ewe less and often poor translation of Latm a.nto English has resulJed in ·:a legac) of un1ntelhgJb1hty." He cited lswyers' all-Joo-frequent use of the word demiscr,''whose onl) virturc is that 11 means de:sth, lease or grant. And not even another lawyer always knows exactly wt\at you mean when you say the 'date t>f demi~.'" The U.S. Army Field Band and Solcllen Chorus pose on Capitol atepa. MelinkofT said many attorneys refuse to substitute "plaih. precise English" for fuzzy. obscure Lalimsms "because they lea.med the law before they learned English." A second panelist; Dr. Lois De· Bakey of Baylor Colle'e of Med1cint. added that many physicians speak or I • write unlntelhgJbly to hide ··muddled thinking" or simpl)' alamonze the profession. · "Some wnte m a Latin. medieval .style because they fear it won't be valued enough if people understand it." she said. "Take the .clinical report on a ' (patient's) condition," said ~Bakey. who teaches scientific communica- < tion to medical students. "I saw one listed recently as serious but satisf<}c- tory ,.. satisfactory to whom. one • wond~rs".The patient of the doctor'?" PAP ARAZZI Army band to appear_ Rousing music expecteo to draw full house at OCC .. The tntema't1onally famous United States Army Field Band of Washrngton. 0.C, will perform ThuMa). Sept. 13 at Orange Coast College The free 8 p.m. conccn in OCC"s 1,2()().;scat Roben B. Moore Theatre will feature compos1t1ons of famous composers. popular melodies and a rousing finale of John Phi hp Sousa's "Stars and Stnpes Forever." As the official tounn& musical organization sponsor- ed by the L.S. Army. the band hM traveled 'morc than :? m1lhon miles in this country. Europe. the Far East. Central America and Canada - The band. which 1s uoder the operational control of the Army's Cluef of Public Affairs at the Pentagon. has entcnained at the Ro)al Fcsll\al Hall 1n London. the Holl~"-Ooc! Bowl Luxembourg Gardens an Paris and the Ol~mp1c Stadium in Scrim. . Concens Ul Washington, 0 .C. have included special performances for the king and queen of Greece. the president of Ireland and NA TO foreiJn ministers. The band also appeared an five Presidential inaugural parades. Lt. Col. Wilham E. Clark. who has more than 27 )ears of expenencc 10 m1htary music. directs the 65 band members. Man) have studied at tpe country's leading con sen atories and schools of music. and many performed "-Ith major S)mphonics a!"d leading dance orchestras ~fore entenng the service. Appeanng "Ith the band v.,I be the 29-voi~ Soldier's Chorus. led b) MaJ. Frank G. Oubuv. OCC officials art expecung a (ull house and ad" isc concen-goers 10 secure ad,ance free tickets in the Cammunit' Service Office m the Student Center on the campus at 1791 Fairview Road. Costa Mesa The office 1s open from 9 .m. to 1 p.m Monda) through Fnda)'. Tickets ma~ be reser\'ed by phone. 43:?-5527. and picked up at the ··will call .. wmdoy,. on the C\ening of the ,cooccn. Tickets. 1f a\a1lable: also "'II be d1stnb1.Hed at the doo~ -- '/) --~~&~---r-~-.----r~--.__,~~~ goes preppy proper s preppies 11te. the) do shptn,and out offas n. ,. ' . · Tom Garrison will descobe their hc)d3)Sin thiscentuf') and hteraturt that•s either required an preparatory ~hooJs or reO ti' e of their campu hfe for Friends or the Orange Coa t College Libran at 7. 10 pm. Wt'dn~­., "The evening will definite y be more of a .dtvcnts~ment than a lecture." sa-id Garrhon ... fapect a little humor. not a seriQU) anal)si~of the writers:· The OCC professor of marine scienceirace~ his suit..and-ue prcpp1- ne s t6 his )ear 11 Um"crsaty o\ Southern California and has fascina- tion with ocean tra\'el, "We'll take a brief look at the passengers and their books aboard the great ocean liner.. -the Mauntama and the Nonnand1e-in 1he I 920s'.lnd ·30s, "The 'ormandle "-3S the ~me size as .the Queen Mar) but 1o1.-as a slave ship b) companson 1n Its fittings. The d1ning hall had ham- mered Lalique glass wall that positively shimmered: 1t was Art Deco to lhe nth degree." Garrison. of Newpon Beach. will read eAcerpts from E'et>n Waugh's ··0echneand Fall" and .. Bndeshead Re"isated" and discuss the "wahoo stuff of the tum-of-the-century graduate" in the .. Lawrenceville Stories." He also will delv.c intofohn Max.tone-Graham's 'The Only Way to Cross" an1f gh ea nod to the~orks ·of Jane l\us.en. .. And ther. of cour.>e. there's the ultirpate preppy -th( Vice Presi- dent. referred to 1n the proper tone of voice as George Herbert Wal r Bush:' said Gamson, a) though v.1uining.l1Jl.10 a ~ttll> ~nal. His ""ill be the first of ~'eral e'ening programs held in private "homes. Call OCCs Library at 432-58 5 for ~>anons and I~ cation. Other fall C\ ent of the Friends 1ncTude: ·· .\d\cnture~ v.1th Olympic Oarsmen .. Y..llh Da'1d Grant. OCC .. TomGUriacm dean of students and usi tant U.S. 01} pie rowing coach. on Oct. 17· dedication of the 'onnan E. Watso~ Library on Oct. 25. and •• 4. Ccf- ebration of Chnstmas in Poett);· •1th Glenn Smnh, OC profi · r cmentus on Dec. 12. rmbenhip an Friends oosts S for OCC studCn'-'. S 15 in.di idual Of' S2S per couple. Benefits include labraf} card. parlu!I& penn1t (except OCC staff and student ) and frt"e admi ion to e\ening programs. Coff~e, tea served with antiques, empathy· By ANN CONWAY "'it. • ·mtcrnat1orral dinner buffet and • DeltJNMC:.•~-· .... , compllmcntal) \\.1new1llbcsencd The old willJu:-<taposcwith the TheS40t1ckcts include repeated modem when the contemporary admi~s1on durmg the four-day Newport Harbor Art Museum hosts event. ats seventh annual Antique Show .\mong 1he lecture toptcs offered , and Sale Sept. 20-23. • durmg the e'h1bition are "Earl) "The museum takes on a vel) Amencan S1J,cr.·· ··Porcelain and difTCTCnt feel during our anuque Furniture Merchants m 18th C en- exhibit," said museum director aury France .. and ... Art of the 17th It lDCo 'bbl Century m ~e" J:n~and.'"Con-ev uey, ni angaia water-eluding the series will be a forum of cress sandwach~uringa formal tea antique cApens discussing "Value (arranged by Ann Anderson) which and Valu~s in Collecung." moder- cclebrated the upcoming event. ated by Don Lagerberg of Cal State "Since we area vcrycontem-Fullerton. 1 porary an facilit)', the beloved old Advisors for the event are mu- 1 pieces area rad1caldepanure from seum members Gay BryHt, 1 • the rest of the year." (C'onscy's Gertrude Thomas, Nancy Fberster , collecting passion is antique Scan-and Nancy Zinsmeyer. dinavian flatware). • Chairmen are Alison Baker, Forty antique dealers will display Helen Clrlde, JaneConnell, Mar- English and-9\mencan furniture and Jorie Cooling, Sally Crow and Paula s an, ancient coins. antique scales. Earl. scientific instruments and a one-of-Also sen mg arc Marjorie Hauret, a-le ind coUectfon oOapis lazuli Judylfurndall, Carmellla Moffatt, never before shown in the United Sue Morgan, Jane Preis, Esther States. Qulck, Merion Seeley, Jan Seymour, "'lt's1mponant forthepubhc to Gate Turner and F~anc~n Webb. rcmcmberthatbntiquesare not Museum Council cha1rll)an 1~ S)'non)'mous with furniture and a Cbrls Marshall. . high pnce tag." Said June Donavan, .\ntJquc how uckets are a\'a1l- public1tychainnan for the show. ~able for SS each and includcnd- "Wc'rc offering glass. c tate Jt'\\ClrS . -~fort he durauon of the 1lver and porcelain pieccsand event. The museun:i m:cy bc~alled at 1 manyarevcryrea onablt.'' 759-1122formorcanformat1on. Kickina ofTthe widely acclaimed · • • • · ~ C:llhibit ( .. One ofCalafomia'1 top f..o acquaint themsehes with the ' three." according to antique authcn-work of Orange County's Mental f , ticit¥,judgc Robert Moore of Bever-Health Association. several area l ly Hills) 1 a preview pla ~t for women gathered forcotftt ll'I the Sept.19at6p.m. Withall40cJthibit Nt>wponBeachhomeofMHA area t up for the how. an 'volunteerCl1rict Brusseau. .. ("0<hos1robv Mtt~bcr Su ao Duley, the mad-mommi klatch pro\edconducl\c toa h' d~ discussion on thl! stru8i.le to sta~ on tht" road of good mental health an a society full of unhealthy detours Citing thedis\urbangstatistic that .. more hoS\)ital are filled v.11h pcr:\onsaffiicted with mentnl health problems than those ~1th hean and lungmaladiescombined." Pat . Krone, MHA board director added. "T"'cnl~ pc!ccnt_ofthccountr) ·~ population 1(affi1cted w1thcmo- ~~---- ... ' ' Those who have lost know 10ve worth ·the cosf Ill &al" t U Yi' rtla U. LISTE , WORl 0! God, all night Iona I tnlSS ham. L) ing half asleep -my conscious memof) lost. ANN IJNDEIS r.' I \i.onder 1f ht" to cd the blan~ets off Or 1f the nun "blowi-n on.hi · all. Or if he's 111 -m> b3b~. And often "'alang. I find my• •If be.side his bed. Stooping to Id s the lml~ tou~lcd head that is no • Ion er there Jo stand and" I tand nd tare \\llh tf't'am1n nd feel 1he fl C)C • • tlaml'. t that smooth p1llo" 3nd unruf· l'(j g1~·c "1) hft', I !> -nu yet 1 fled pre d "Pu.le.Jn t Remcmberin slo" I). that m) ~on I mu'\t '\l:I) ri ht here nd do m> 1Hkad. . job 11111 h:a\Ct II d:i) long I It tc:n tor his step, e mei:t the r1 ht to o U\\D)'. he lhs "ht~tlc and h1\ \\\c"·t, uncer-p:i t hnpai; Cd. t:un '°"I· , I lo\ cd him -~cs' But love i not a l h ten until the \1lcnc:c tighten lot "round m) thro t. • .... 1 o at15f) on·· l>rl\ tc pndc nd Oh God. )OU know I'd g1\.'C m) htt JD\. to hear hi 'oice o -loHt' n pan of that eternal again. plan To fctl, once more. th~ touch of hi.. H) "h1ch (iod manifests himself to youna. cager man. hand And y,e "ho Jo\ emu t nlso d rt 10 Rheumatoid arthritis W ALDSCBMJDT-JOLLIE Deborah Lyol'l Jollie of Hum: angton Beach and Mark Alan Wald chmidt of Arcaa1a e>.rhangcd y,e-dding vows in a July 1 ceremon)' in %. Simon and Jude Roman CathoHc -. tti_riv.e~_ qp. late .d.iclgllosiS Church. Huntington Beach. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward S Jollie Jr. of DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: .\ doses. But other patients may rcquin: Hunungton Beach he wo(e a Vic- cousin had . a case of rheumatoid u c of ron1c'o-!>tero1ds, pencillamine torian style gown of embroidered anhritis. I've be(n havrng tender and ~nd-anttmalamw afU lf lhty-don't--OIJ!OZl.Hlftlh ttit-ted bodttttrrmmcd-------S ... tlff knee joints and soreness in m~ PETER respond gold injections may be wt~h seed pc:a~ls and a noor .length hands. l'v~ also been fcehng vef) nccesaf). Th1<i. therapy requires skirt sweeping into a chapel train. She tired. re these symptoms of careful \upervs1on -r~.unc blood wore her mother's wedding "'eil of rheumatoid arthritis? Shall I tr) STEINCROHM and urine lhcd.ups to prevent side-tulle flowmg from a crown of accor-aspinn tor a while or see a doctor., n effects I hope >OU now understand, d1on pleated tulli tnmmed wnh pearl MRS. N . Mr. N . tt).BL more than self-lreat-studded stephanot1s. . DEAR MRS. N.: Like most other ment 1s essenual in treating Cheryl Gra.,.es of Hummgton illnesses, this disease thn\es on late es c;hronac the Joint., <>tiffen, bet'ome rheumatoid arthritis Beach was her sister"s matron of daa&nosis and inefficient treatment swollen and tender -making motion • • • · tlonor, and two cousins. Gma Dicken For your own peace of mind and difficult and painful Joan ts on both DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: My oflouisv1lle. K> . and Linda La Forge physical being. better settle on a nsat sides ma} be afTcl 11:d -more often husband has no family history of of Long Beach were bndesmaids. to your doctor . the koees. hands lel't)11p., .Fat ague ~iabetes. Howc\er, dunng a roOtme Other bridesmaids were Pam Mallon. , Rheumatoid arthritis as what we becomes pronount thl're ma\ be · 'heckup on his 5Sth btnhday. blood Jail Ford and Stephanie\\ h1te. Sheryl call an auto-immune disease Tile weight loss and ancm;a • and urine te.sts showed diabetes His Suhre of Cumberland. R I., another mflammauon begms in the synov1al The patient finds comfort using doct<;>r dido t pre~nbe msuhn. This cousin ·of the bnde. was JUntor Debor ah Waldacbmldt membrane of the joints and spreads either hot or cold treatment. special womes me. Wont there~ 8 greater bridesmaid. -:-1nvadan$ the camlage of J01nts exemses. and !>pcc1al protecuon of chance of comphca~ioos . Arc diet The bridegroom 1s the son of Mr. · Untreated, Joints ma) easily become the joints. In some (ase'i 'iurgery 1s and exem!.C enough · Has te!>t'> have and Mrs. Norman E. Waldscatmidt of SINNE-BENEDETTI · deformed. Earl) treatment often pre· necessai; 10 restore fumt1on. Im-been normal. MRS: V. Arcadia H1_s best man was Mark Newport Beach resident Lisa . ~entS such comphcauons. provement doesn't rnme O\Cm1gh1 DEAR MRS. V .. Whether or not \1oothart of San Diego and ushers Benedetti, daughter of Mr. an'd Mrs. Patients WJth rheumatoid arthrim . Drugs arc neccssaf) to reduce insulin is .n~cessa11 depends on .man> included his three brothers. Tom Harry Casino. became the bride of -compfui n of' tiredness. achy feelin~ 10flammation anq ·relic\ e pain. factors. If diet and exercise have been Scott and Da' 1d \\. aldschm1dt. all ot Harl) \ Smne in an Aug. 19 and stiffness. If the condtllon becom: Asp1nn ma} be ellec11 \ c in larRe efTecuve '" controlling his blood .\rcad1a and .\ndrew Oesterle and ceremon) in San Diego. ------------------------·---------. sugar. treatment with msuhn !S not Bnan Erwin, both of San Diego. Bridal attendants were Darlene essential. Whichever method of treat-The Queenswa\ Ba\ Hilton Hotel Snow and Ronn) O'Bnen. Thirty ment 1~ used. normal blood sugar in Long Beach was the setting for a guests attended a reception after the lessens the hkchhood of comphca-reception attended b) 300 guests. ceremony at I.he home of Mr. and tions: After a weddmg tnp to Australia, Mrs. G.M S1one. the bndegroom's MISSIOft VIEJO Ea~ ds 'I• :l!I v eio •,•3 495 6220 COSTA MESA ORANGE ..,a'f• T )Wn Ct"'P' ; ~i1e• 1'84 _b 4 'SS? FOUNTAIN VALLEY l•lilCJll:~i ..... • .. ~ l.•l ~ ., IRVINE llUEHA PARK »act ~e Par· fo,, "11S"\J •• s •, D•~· II-« 88" II Jl, A "THE NEW PRINCE Of. HOLLYWOOD:' NOW SHOWINGt WI04 •fotJNTAIH VALLH 'PK1fic Allahe1m 0 Or In f ~m1ly fou1 s19mo 963 1307 ,., f, ~ ' ·-· ... " *COSTA llU A *ORAIG: Ed••ld\ Soutll Cout c. nedotnt Pim 546-271 i 634mJ 8wl A1...,o11o-c~""-lH '•r El. TORO MSTlrMSTO Ed1mds Saddlet>eck Hi.ray 39 ()! In DEAR DR. ·sTEmCROHN: M> the couple are h\ing in ~an Diego parents. wife and I have been waiun~ for a where ~th arc employed by Science The couple will reside 10 Del Mar baby. At last. seven )Cars after our Apphcataons International Corpor-after a "'edding tnp to Hawau. He is mam<\gc she 1., prcinant. .\£there is a at1on an La Jolla the o"' ner of H..A.S. Stables ~nd 1 a history of twins 10 my family. rm BENJAMIN-HILL thoroughbred horse owner. She is hoping we're fonunate to ha\e more ~t Joachim's Catholic ( hurch m a'>&i+iant manager.ofGu1han~s than one bab) Ourdcx.torsa) he will ( osta Ml'!oa was th'e setting for the YESK-BURKE let us know w1th1n a few weeks <\ug. 18 marriage of Gayle Mane Hill whethcr or not she is Carr) ing twms. to 'W 1lliam Brooks Benjam1R. The The Garden Room of the Ho"' ·s that done., MR. H. Rev .\I Stott of Long Beach a \hanteda1r ce'1aurant in Ir" me was DEAR MR. H.: Use of u11rasound longtime fam1l> friend. officiated at 1he setting fO'r the Aug. 4 wedding of ca n determine 1f there's a twin the cqcmony .and nuptial r;ass. A, Holl) Kathleen Burk rrh1cago and pregnanc) as earl) as the months reception luncheon was held at the Robert Harris Ye'>k. s<. n of Mr. and 4.sk him 1f this 1s the test he has in '\ewport Harbor.Yacht Club. -Mrs. Albert J. Ycsk of Newport mind. Mr and Mrs. Donald A Hill of Reach. ~ewpon Beach are parents of the The hnde was escoried bv Robert bndc. and former Newpurt Beach Pekurn) a longtime fncnd of the residents Mr and Mrs Horace Ben-couple She 1s th~dauihter of Mr. and 1amin now of San Diego. arc parents Mrs 1'.orman J Burke of Fredenck of the bndegroom Md. Her gown was ot white chiffon The new Mr and Mn •. Ben1amin with an ofTthc shoulder bodice oflact are graduates of Newport Harbor and sctd pearls with lace tnmmed H1$h School and l SC The:,. are now puffed slee"es and a lace flounce on residing m Irvine after a hone) moon the full ~ktrt She wore a wreath ofs1lk on Maui. flowers m her hair. Janet Yesk. sister of the bnde- groom. was maid of honor. and hi~ brother "'1ichael Yesk was best man One hundred ten 11ue~ts attended a reception 1mmed1ately followrng the . m 1oq bidlb pndc nd n kno~ • • • lJo11'r1et burner/ b.> a .. Jme"' th1.Jt '.t wo hot ro handle. PlaJ 11 cool ~1th Ann L.apdcr·• 1uiile to "Neckin and Pcmn1 -What Aft" tht L1m11s?'' Srnd your reque1t to Ann l..andrf'"I. P.O. Bo.It 11995. Chicaso, Ill. 606tJ. cnc-lo~ins 50 ttnts and a long. stampro, sdf:.addre sec.I cmclo~. Gayle Benjaniln HollyYeak ceremony at the Chan1ecla1r. The couple will hve m Los Angeles where he 1s a student in the MBA program at use. She IS a former educational d1agnos1ic1an emplo)'ed by the special educauon distnct m Lake County. 11( LA HABRA ORANGE 581 5880 891·3693" ~-----~--~---------~- AMC fast " ~ ua•p fl loto 41 t:ic •lorld S-d So Ol'C 1., 69 0633 b.N 81 0 LA MIRADA s~o Ga1io11a, 5 "-'AUfSAC(f''ID 523 16'' fOA '"I (trifGIAt.ltilfllllll "Tt( WOMAN IN RED ' (PG·13) 12JO l 1~ 42tl ~ 10 ! lO 1~ lQ "llED DAWN ' (P'G-13) ,. 00.IY $1{11(0 I 00 llS S'IO ti~ 1030 '"''* 1400 l• M.••• Moll l.I M>uN At Ro1«11•1 LN!XR II" I!( ~1110 llj 00.IT Slllll:O I' ~ I •' 1• • PRESENTED IN DOLBY STEREO . I "~"(a) llj llOllY ,ffl(O •oc. • x 10 ·~ "RED DAWN" (PG·ll) 11 30 3 00 5 JO 8 00. 1D30 "Tll: WT STWlGHTU" {PG) u• ••s 'STM Tm I : Ttl SEMCH F<M SPOCK" (PG) "~ 100 * PAClflC DRIVE -IN THEATRES• * CI NE-Fl SOUND! At thtst symbols great sound dtrtet to your AM ~' * r1d10. It no 11d10 with ecceuory position, b"nt your own AM portable. ALL OPEN 6:45 Start Dusk Ch11drenUftder 12 ALWAYS FREE'· 'i':4,:14'A' 31 ::!.:~·.~·~1.!::1·.~J Fountain Valley • • SUPER SWAP MEETS btry SAT g Sunday•* 111c1•M•1110 'wr' ''"•'•"'' il!Jn;m&\l\'dorn ·!\~*m_B ' ** * GtmTIUSTIJS" <PC> >'.t "us f CVEllDT (P'S) I\ " ··swo WACT" (R) "MN pA!f' c•> "a.ISTN" <•> I - LaHABRA .J&.A "RID DAWN" CPG·U) I ' l'UIPl.C IAll 11 l MISSION (=.,":::. 714 cu cws O ,.,. I hr?r• c .... .. Act .. . ,, ... llQ IH lf11 C Kii.ii" (II 11)1) llO 0 0 6 10 110 10 10 S 'IOl•JGO l.llVUSITY ,. ~~ li lfl~ C ...... Cli ILAS!ftlfr !PSI Aaw1 I l\Jtll ,_ llQ ' S. v '\ 9 IC C u lt ~ S1 •'•JOO SITT, / 11)1.er m1110 ~ -ll(MJIWI Alfw J4 IO IN Ill f.-la llJO H~ 410 UO 1 ~ IS4·1111 to JHllOOO • WESTMJNSTER • ....... '") lllO l~ H 100 IOI\ I '°TIJOO IC1•,1ol 1\11\\ 11lh1 1 111,1111.:1• c·.,,,,.I ll'" 1c1 .. 111 11 , 111.11..1· .ind "l'l'nd t lw11 "'""' \ 111 Iii•: I •·.11111 lllJ.! p .1),:I'' * COSTA W.SA * • El TORO • Diii:!• ) 00o Uodf< 11 ,.1~~ ,,, 4141 CIHlMA CIR .. .-. ··-97, 414 1 ClltMA CHI _, • SADDlCBACK -..c.wl" (Pl-U\ \0 ..... sno I II l.!9 )IS I IS 91S 1 '•• •• 1• IHO I• JOO m mo :1oo SAOOUBACK ----· Tl( IOllS. (I) 1 •• f f '··'• ~II ~UO I J \ I t 104S 11~ 1' JOO SAOOl.£8.01 rlll<fl l'\#\1 ·-(l ) 100 CIO 61\ B\ ICC) '•• I r.~Tl'.JliO SAOOt [8AC~ QIOSllUSIOS • <PC> 110 lJO ~·~ UO 10 IC IHO '' lOC 10 Ditta .on· .,..,JI~ c 14\ lOO l 1~ 1110 • MISSION VIC JO • llilyPilat COSTAMUA UAC"*T!.IC«lt., !M00SM 01W11CA1 AMUA ~ C.OW.da CIM!t\I Cfftlff ~ 2.S5J 1179 41•11 •WLSTMINSTtll EdlorMlll OtlllNWltt ••..3'JS )Oll O\VF. mt RSEl.F O:\f: MORE AU\'Ei'1 ~ R£ . K~FORE THE SUM~1F.RS OVF.R. 1 :-----...----~-----...J1,;.._.-:-__....,...... __ ,..;_.-----=-"....;;-------.......... ~----_:_._ ( .. • J .. . , L~ ... IATT\llTM IAlACT1CA •••••fBOfrT lmlOOUCIG IK>lOOY Bluegrass ~usic was150tn pn Jerusalem.Ridge, Ohio <*MEWi llCK VIM OY1(! MOYIE * t ~ ' A ' UPtldt Down" 1978) Helen Heyn, Fred t MOW t * '"Sllpltici 0t Anothtt 'Kind" (1914)jerty Ltwlt. ~KIM C0)¥CJY'E. · U Str"l)t lhw" (1N3J D6¥t 1~k~ e w._~-. tt ''Gt... 2' I 1N21 Mt•wtll ID....,.,. Cevlfiltd, Mlehellt Pltlfftr t t * . "The Ptll\Ct And Tiit :10-ShowQlrl" (1951) ~--C>IM«. c W'1'H 'AT'HER Mll'llyn Monr°' tMQ8. / LEID 9 INTERTAINMENT TONIOKT ·-10!00- 1 flttOTOGMNC VlllOM I CAONEY l LACI'( NEwt ••NEWS . DO( VIM OVK1 MOYlt U * * ' The Golden Aoe Of Com. I-~ ·~~==·~~ =-NOW =~o:o.m ( MOVIE I&°"' . a..~~:_f<lucftly. MA01tGMMOW YOV11 · '6Wlllle Stark" return• , Jl IMGAZJNI THATOll. • :Id~~~:~ 14 P11 Timothy Nolen le featured In the title role of· -1='0-· _10:1~ Charlle Floyd'• opera baeed on the Robert .....,.~~OU a ~eA-DiWel, • l;t.ilt;JK1H1lniaiglf' .. 9J:ttMMtenm;,~nt:-.-.cmumt'n1:at-'ttc1TTTrqu~ ~Jr~C>HG.GAito -10'JO-encoi1na tontatit on PBS etadon•. It I• the TAU!IOFTOMOMOW INDEPENOENTNEWS etory of a amall-tlme polltlclan who rleea to NIWI ~TY~--the 1o•e~orahlp of a Southern •tate. MDAYATATIMI ,...,"""~ """'ngwi . • There arc still P.C<JPle m Ohio County who don t knO\\ about Monr~ and Rosine. but of cn\:el~ from &ill o-. er the .rounU') NOPlft C()(MT -10'.46-9> MOVIE . CJ) MOYIE .r Wl.01 WlDWOM.DOF • NEWS *** "No Way To Treat A Ledy" ttl" 1·Go A.tit Abet' (1973) William =':' l"~~·Y~e-NlWI • J (1-==-:~tl Stietner.Jatn11Smitt1Jack10n Actorfindsfameafter.35 years -·-,_,, • TNJllTOAIU -2:00-THAT Gii. "'-' ntE JEfFIRSONr 1 • -12: 11-8 Cl) Cit NEWS ltOHTWA.TCH . ' By BOB THOMAS A-'alM l'f-Wrltw • FMGGU ROCK IOUD GOLD HIT8 MOYIE HEALTH AB.D CITYU8HTI MOOOONSGHIORt tttt "JtSM Jamtt" (1939) • ROWAN&MARTW81.AUGK4H LOS ANGELES -George Gayncs "'ho has performed with the New York City Opera, acted on (C)MOYIE Broadwa) and was the soap opera • • Endlta. LCM (19811 ~OOll• actor on the make fo.r Dustin Hoff- MOYIE • MOVIE Twone Po.tr.~~ Fones. *** "The Tenth Vlc11t11" (1965) *** •Thi Gfoow Tubt" (197~) ,. ·-"' -2:06-Marctllo M111rotann1, Ureula Ken Shlpero, Richard Betz«. 8 •• ,,,_.. ~ A.ndr9 , (Q) MOYIE ,,....~ "''"""""""' · --1:00-tt blr Ot Tht Pvllt Panthet" "8ENTI 8 Cl)~ AND MM. 11ta2• Peter 5*1. DIM NMlll IDT Of LA. TODAY -taMa ' 'f0¥AN& MA.RTWS LAUOH-IH ~ ll.OClftM ....... -11:»-I NEWS '" • JOtCD """ • Cl) u.a. OPEN TSll8 LOYE. AMERICAN mu e MOVIE tlGHUQHTI GROWINO YfAM * * t * ''A.dMI 1 Rib" I 1949) Spen-SI PAID POlJ'nCAL -1:00- w == Hlpbum. 1=-MOHTUNE D LATttlOH'T wmt DAVID I anal'AWTOHIGHT • HOW TO"llAKI IT 1LE• rAUTRY MOYIE ITMETIOllAN~ ..,.. , _Cl,...,. .. •••• "McCabe And Mfl. ...... LAT81GHT AMeAICA M~ORS..._ ...... (1971) Wln'tll ~· Jullt Cl'Wlltit r MOYIE gr~ AT~: ** "H~ Ill. Staton Of Tht ttt "Tht Dark Al Tht Top Of Thi ~IM MUEJM CW NIT Wlteh" (1982) Tom Atkins, Stacey Stawe" (lteO) RoQtrt Prttton, Doro- IGMAT PWOMWCO Htlkln ;;=• _. -11:40-r ** ''Curtt Of The Plflk. Panthtt" 12 O'Cl.OQ( HG4 MOYIE .. ( 1983) T td Waaa, O.Vld Niven MOYIE * "H.0 T.S I' (·4979) Susan Kiger, ,...1:05_ *** "South Pacahc" (1958) MIUj Uul.ondon MOYIE ~. Rotaano lkml -12:00-tt "No'# And Forever" ( 1983) ~~Aomantlc Comedy'' (1913) ~~·~·. Gttat•t LM-'' Cheryl I.add, Robert Coltby ...... -. . ...., .. .., ... :.... :i&-.c..i-_,,,._ YOVll BT OF CAMON MOVE ** we.y A)oney'' (1983) ' ZONE · HU The T111 DNtn" (1979) Olugerlle6d, Jot P«c..-. _ THf& 0 DmUl1nntn Angela Winkltr ll!YOMWON • YOVll -1S- --I:*>-**** ''When Comedy Wat King ' MOVIE ITICTAODOUQH (1M0) Complltd by Robttt y~ ** Grt1tt 2 ' (19821 MIXMI CMMON aon Cautlllld, Midldt Pl fftr. PJl MMAZIE (IJ .. lll9ela.._ _ _..IT HEWS -UO- FMa. Y RUD • AU. If TH! FAlllll Y 8 NEWS ''E;NGROSSING ... brlWantly played:' -lud1th Crist WOR·TV • ....... c ....... ~....._ DAIWYI JllM'""I ... , .... ,..,...., ltM,wt, , .... THt.·"9n. l 1M, 1121, 111tt Shitlc!•· Maron Hftitt man an "Tootsie," has no trouble -2::30--handling stardom in has 60s. NEWS ~fter .. Toon1c,'' he scon:d as the -2!AS-mar\ elousl) di pp) commandant in IMOVIE ··Police Academ) ... Telc\ls1on took "Tht BlOOd Of Othtr1 11~1 Jodta notice of the "ne"' .. corned) per- FOltw. MICtllt!Ontklln former, and now he's tamna in the -S:OO-new NBC sitcom. "'Punky Bre"'ster." (!)~BILKO He 1s a big, robust.ryian of 64 wnh ro: ...,,,"" sand) hair and a fnendly face. He ***'"' 'My Favontt Yw • (1982) seems such a native 4.merican that Pt1tr O'TOOlt. Jllsiea'Hlrper. it's a shock to learn he was bom in -3:20-Finland to a Dutch father and MOYIE Russian mother. * "'tiday Tilt 13th, Part 111" 119921 "My parents divorced soon after l Dina Klt\Vnll. Peul Kratka was born." he said in an in ten: 1e"'. "I -3:JO-·" "'ent with my mother to Pans. then (1) FAmt 20 she married an EnaJishman and I was (Zi MOVIE -3:46-raised by governesses for eight )ears. * p, ..... ,, School ' (1983) PllOebl They divorced, m) mother moved to Clttt, Betsy AUSllll S"'atzerland and I "'as a Swiss~) for -4:00-5C'-eO )tars. atCAOO'IF1RIT"90RT He was studying opera in Milan. CD OSE9COTT Ital). "'hen World War II broke out. -4:06--interruptin& his ~hooling. He joined <.Cl MOVIE the.. Dutch nav') and then the Bnush ** .. Y• Giorgi<>" (1912) LucilllO nav) PavwotU. l<a!twyn HMrold · After combat in the· Mcd1tcr- . ~ ranean. Gaynes stf'\:ed a )Car in the (!)THE MUPPET1 occupation force at bombed-out EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT .... 12141,' llOO lt10, ltH, l~I edwards NEWPORT MIWIOt" ci.nu "''"' 644 O O l'aC CO.a\f Nw' tff'WI.. • 76 J ..... OUf I "'ACAtl'><Ut T1n.·'111n • lt11, ·~ AfWOI &398770 Stadium Or In , ltOA 'MK ~52-4993 UA Mow a 8 I! hta.tl'r• SEE 'GREMLINS' .AGAIN BEFORE rou HIT . mEBOOKS! Gt£MUNS COSTA MESA 751 4184 OMIQ 834-2553 Edwards Town Center SYUFY City Center At AMiii ' "'' Ceettr !SQI FOllfTAf4 VAL.UY 963 1307 SANTA ft SPRINCS 523-9310 family four 17111 la M rad1 Or In 1-iM~I They're not etaylng down thaef anymore! C.H.U.D. ( Connlbaliitic. Humono d Underground ~It ) NOW SHOWING! AIWOI 639 8770 STADIUM DR IN BR£A 990-4021 UA MOWS 4 um ,.. 9Si,993 UA MOV1£S 8 I 11YOU REALLY CHEER! REVENGE OF THE NERDS makes you care about its characters. Robert Camdine has created a great characterr »r ""' IV COSTA IEA 979 4141 •• 854 11 EDWARDS CINEMA C£Nl£R COWAROS OMVERSITY COSTA M£SA $40~94 ()aMG[ 637 0340 UA SOUTH COAST AMC OAANG( MAU El Toa<> 581 5880 SAM W CAI. 493 454!> EDWARDS SADOl£8ACK PACIFIC MISSION Oii ff GAlOOUiROVE 530 4401 WEllWCSTO 893~6 EDWARDS WlSTBROO« UA WEST TCR MALL H 'DREAMSCAPE. IS THE NICEST · SURPRISE OF THE SUMMER." ~--~ TOftiCP!t Enter a wortd beyond yoilr wildest imagination where ruJyjhiog can happen. I , Emden in northern German), and then became manqer of an opera company in Alsace. Gayoes· soarina basso took him to Europe's major opera houses. then te the New York Cit) Opera in 1949. · .. Opera palls after a few )ears," he ~1d. "The sets and costumes art tack\. the operas are not -.cu dµcCted , and they arc insuffiClenlly acted. I took a role on Broadwa) in Gian Carlo Menotti's 'The Consul: and for several ycan I v.'&s· the only performer commutina bctv.een opera and Broadway.musicals. sometimes doml'both at the same time." Gaynes appeared in such shows as ··wondc:rful Town" (with Rosalind Russell) and "ACommun1tyofTwo'' (Oaudete Colbert). Ho. was in the movies, "PT 109 .. and "The Way We ·Were." and even played the malevol-· ent Mr. Smith 'n th~ soaper "General Hospnal." But despite a sccmin_,y $UCCCSSful car«r, th~ was a ~od when M could find onl) smalltime TV and theater jobs. A broker fnend ~ him to switch to a career in Wall Street. George dtcided to gfi.c 1t at!] -unul he learned ··a aood year would produce S.t 5,000. ''Hell, Allyn (hi.s wife) and I could manaae thlt much c~ in i. bad }tar," he rtmarked ... I tw'ried dowa the job offer an4 shortly afterwant was hired to replace Don Porter in 'Any Wednesday: .. Georgr Ga)nes might ba~e con- tinued as a soHd cbaracttt actbr except for ••Mary Hanman, Mary Hartman.'' The soap opera spocij" made producers realize be was • superb comedy actor. ..Wk.RP iA Cincinnati•· . follo .. ed. 1h.ci "Tootsie." BO DEREK An Adventure in~ 9 A CANNON HUA I •••• ,-·•-flJWl. J ··-11··-- COSTA llDA ~~3102 Ed•ards Cmml n 1mo sa1-S8$> EdwardS ~bac• ~Gmt 530-4401 [dnrdS Wtstbroo\ OlAllliUJ4 3911 UA City Center SMT•AM~7UI [dwatds Bnst IESTlmTEI 8'1·3935 Edw1rdS CWml West t~JR.lru:.a:~ * D.RIVE -INS m~ :r~~:~~~ STfl,,.[)fl[)I :iA:::i !l1!12.~~!!lt~ s ll3t.H•l•lutl6i '"u"~-ci;, J ~:'s~ffi:.':'1 s . lfei. Lowe oaJO•DM.UID · CN-t• At 1ct0 Sill s u 1:20 •tin llED OAw. ..... ti) SllOWI •t TZ:SO J:OO S:SO 1100 • &. t O:JO Ctlnt llHtwooG s~~~1 1120 7:SO • t01U a I Murray O•n Ayllroyel ~aCNJ SllOWI" tZ:ZS z:•o •1U 7 1U t iS0/70 MM '*"""" .tOltD • Til9 T __ .. 0.-(N) Sllows al U :OO Z JO 1100 7:)0 &. 10 00 IN 70 MM _,. c;, mg.1 o ;121 t\'.vn / =~.J.!!!!!J f'LAS..-Ottn , .. , J110 71ZO l'oet10011 K •I• Krlltoffeoon I ••&MU..S (N) 12 1S 2 to •.os 1 100 I~) 1101 S1U 7 u &. t S5 &. t r2S OIUV( llU Qi.I~-"'°"' __!ZJ__llfl ~llO~T .. NPtDa (IQ """' ... ,.,,., ,._, ••EMU.CM) ,.,._,TN N9"orll!Mlln• , Story ('°t' MTAUT, TENSE AND TEARIFICl1' .., Ct1M ca .._,,. _ c:q n "***1h*. One of the most gripping .. ·Eastwood adventures in recent years~' Ce,,. 5,... 0"'"90 tr ,,. " . - ... ' 7 GARt'IELD . : PWOOOOCK, PWOCK, PWO(.K. PWQC.t\ THE FAMIL\' CIRCUS "It's Billy's soap-on-a-rope. We're playing Olympics. '.1 MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson . , "You can have the bone, Marmaduke ... but not while my steak Is still on·itl" MOO~ MULLINS PEAN T SCMOOL STW5 TOMORROW, SIR ... AAE YOV REAOV? TUMBLEWEEDS -niA"f a....m.~ -·Ro.AN rvnl • '~ OFMlN&! n , l'M REACN, MARCIE .. I A~EAOV' KNOW ALL TME ANSWERS .. ' J ' by ~itn Davis · 'DON'T LOOM, S'TRETCM! rr~ NOT A Pf\Ei"fY 5tG'i'f ! BIG GEOQGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) - BRIDGE CU -Both vulntorahle, u oulh yc111 ho ht •KJ8S Q9 72 +A853 'Tht h1dJ1ni ho ptot't•td<'d \\ Ht ~orth E .. t South J 'l I) ... ~. 'l \\'b111 .tr on do you t.ak~i' A.-If wu b1<l two no trump. y•lu I'{' oml'th1ng ln the south hand I hat ~ t• 1Jun't from ~ h1rh su1l do / you l'llf>t'Ct lo miake' your trkk '/ Hon't fllnl~ and try to resru p:irt nt•r 11.-~hould havt' a ~casonable u t lor h1 t ,,.·,. lt>H•I o•~r II. and yuur fl'" .:oodu• rould H ily be l"n11u1rh for him . to make hi con trac·t. Q 2-IJ.•th \ ulnc•r;ahlr, a • oulh')OU •hold• I •AK7 "'KQ93 :¢'KJ83 •tO~ l'.ir.t n1•r up<>n' t'lw h1cfd1ng "II h ont' c-luh Wh.1t do \'OU rr,µ11nd! A.-' ou h.I\ 1· 0 1 ht• ,fr1•nl!:lh hut not t h1• ~h.1p1• (ur .1 JUmp to lhrt•t• no • 1rump 1h.ll .tt't1on "n· t•r .. tdJor h.1nch ~1th ii 1.1.1 1 p.lllt·rn. Here. I • • • .... , I CH8RLES I GOREN "•:R TO WE Kl,\ BRIDGE QUIZ. .-~\!U h;i\1 uh. nd ¥>1th 1r1·nwn dout ufrrnmr pult>ntlal hu1 hlllr or 1111 drfton11'" I his ITllRhl not ""'" he · •our hantl' Jum11 tu 'rnur 1p dc•1 \ uu l111~bt m.1k1• I\, or \'uu could • .1 1h 111h1tt tht• uppont ntJ out ul • ,1rt11 '. p11 slhh• ''"'n ~lam Q.4-~l'itheor \llln1 r11hlr, Ill :)uuth , mu hold •Q7 3 AQ8 0 J7d .,_, !'ht• h1tld1ng hac;; flror • d1 d :\orth 1 "ut South Ea t I . Pan J + P111 I NT Pa t ? \\'l\;it do \OU hid Miii"' .:..~tnc; pMtnt·r hu .s116¥on a miNmum op<-ninr bid, you 11r" not ' intt'rested lo anyth1n1 more than gam And )1ntt. partmor'" hand Is halantt'd, tht'rt' is no rt'ason y,.hy you hould wan\ to try for 11 track) in diamonds rather than nine 1n no trump·. Bid three no trump. Don't adverY: ~ ~our dramond support lo th/' opponent• grlr.t.is._ •• 0 AR SHARIF 'a 1>u haveo only on1• d11111ond ll)pper and 110 guarantet> thiat your 1 •h un t11ko 111ne> trkl(a bt>for 1tw op, p011l'nt~ "''' five. Sinrt-partn~r h.u 'shown a'" rttluct:inceo' le> play no trump. you ~houlJ ttt I> <'I ht warn 1nl( aand r11l l' to four.~padl'~ Q.6-:'llt>1thl'l' vulnt'rable. Ill South you hold. •AQJOS 1;?J9fS2 0 1 + 72 l'h" bidding h;is pr~eded North Ea t 011th Wett l 0 Pua l !\;' PaN I + PaH. 1 What du vou bid 11ow'! A.-\'ou ' ha.-e ucell nl upp rt • anJ ~hat 1•ould pro't' 'o ~ •1ultt' a u .. f'fol hand fo:r par,nl'r How-\et, game 1 unlikely lu~e parw r c n makt• • \·oluntary move. Therefort', ChPrt• i<. no · nt't'd for ynu lo do un\ thinic mor.-dramatic than rai':'tl Io l" u '>pJ.IJl's. \Ou could 1·."11\ h.llit' a 'lam in any Q.5-A South. vulnt>rahlf', you === == ~~___,,~-=-~~~___,,~,.,..,....___,, .,._.~~vtt~rnmr.·•~·~1.wvo~~~~~homar~ldHb~id+--~.:.:....;h~o~ld~:~~;.:.:.:;;:......;~~~="---.-=---~~__...=--...-==~==~""==- your h.ancl ,,, n.il ur.111} ,1., po.,<;ible • Q.. ~ AQ& <> A832 +J 1082 ' J "I hate Mondays." DENNIS THE ME~ACE • Hank Ketcham - No CCGs ~ .~-. I by Ferd & Tom Johnson 'EDDY? WILLIE" HERE COUNT ME OUT UNTIL MAYS, YOU DIDN'T KNOW MANV LAST YEA~ 1<185 by Charles M. Schulz SO'rnlS '<'EAR TRUES WILL BE FALSE AND FALSES WILL SE TRUE ! by Tom K. Ryan \\'1• thank fH>MI) of :in_, rt''pomw The bidding ha proceeded: nlht·r lh.rn um• 1.la.1mund North Ea•t outb WHt Q.3-.\, :-.1111th. 'ulnt•r;~hl<', ~nu hold . •QJ762 9 QJ41732 •7 Parlnt•r Opt>n~ lfit• h1dd1ng with on.e spade What do you rt' pond'! BRABBLE l • PH• 2 NT Pa11 3 • Pa11 7 What do yOJ.1 bid now'! A. -H partner doe,n't havt> six 'P'\dt'~ on this auction, hr hu erred. FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~'wr1r ~ rur•-~ FU~K \' WINKt;RBEAN .. DR. SHOCK •• I DUNNO <.,OJ SEEM 10 BE Hl1'Ti~ A LDT OF 5HOi5 OfF 'TME. FRAME I ANN ! .... How do you choM the be1t ope•· · ln1 lead? CharlH CorH bu lM · an1wer. For • (0PY of "WluJq Openin1 Lud1," MDd 11.85 to "Corea·Lud1." P.O: BOJ1 811. Palmyra, N.J. 080t5. Make tltft<k payable to New1p.pert...k1. by Jeff ·MacNelly by Kevin Fagan .. by Lynn Johnston • IRERE.#S N01HIN'ELSE. lODO by Tom Batiuk by George Lemont . 1'"H tS N 1.,.-Wl'f""S FACf;. MASK Fe!.U-OFF A6AIN/A - - L Reale Jacbon (left) throwa a body block on Yankeee' Da•e Winfield, while Juan ~lqaez ta.tee a awtna at " . .. 'r ... ,, ""1111• 1111 pitcher Ray Fontenot during fint of two brawle between Anael• and New York at Anaheim Stadium. . . .. Yanks avoid· -. • • • s~r1~s sweep Fifth-inntpg br:awl does the trlG~: .. Angels fall .. 5~3 By RICHARDO ._., ,.... Cerf $ 0 'Pl Bobb' Meacham rehc' Cd some of the Ya.nkees' fru trauons unda> after the) had uffered thro a 1ough weekend. nd the .result w one of the most wildest · bcnch- clcann v.I thi id ·of At! nLl''.1> ulton ounty Sta 1um. But the end re uh of this brawl hun the Angels. leaving them withqut Juan Beniquez and possible pinch- bitter Darvl Sconiet5, both of whom were ejectCd So the 'Angel~' 5-3 lo s to Ne"' York. which ended a four-prM wanning streak and mo" ed them back into ird place, was the second feature to th1s matinee performance at Anaheim Stadium. It started in the fifth inning when Angel starter Ron Romanick beaned Dallas gunning for Rams with MOnday Night Special · Rogeboorri-led Cowboys out for revenge against Dickers on, Ferragamo and Co . ByCURTSEEDEN Of .... 0.-, Not ..... Armchair refer~ begin the first of many three-day football weekends tonight when Monday Night Football returns with the Dallas Cowboys.and the Rams picking up where they left off last season. Those two teams. you might recall, met 1n the NFC wild card game in lrvang, Tex , and the underdog Rams pulled off a shocking 24-1 7 victor). OK. so I\ didn't get the Rams anything more than a disaster effon against the Washington Redskins. It a!so put them on the Cowboys' public enemy list. Dallas has waited fo~·this game, and they bring a Gary Hogeboom-Led offense to Anaheim Stadium tomght at 6 m the NFL regular-season opener for both teams. Last ·Tuesday, Dalfas Coach Tom Landry announced that Hogeboor;n would r~place-Danny White as the- Cowboys' starting quarterbac~ against the Rams. It will be the first NFL start for Hogeboom. who 1s Oilers stands up · but fall to-Raiders ·HOuston fights, ---but it doesn't stop 24-1 4 loss HOUSTON (AP) -The Houston Oilers proved they would not ~ tnt1m1dated by the Los Angeles Raiders in their National Football Uague opener Sunday but all 1t got them was a 24-14 loss to the defend- ing Super Bowl champions. The Oilers were ready to go toe-to- toe with the combative Raiders everyt1me a scuffle erupted but lhe Raiders still broke away wtth a ' second-half scoring surge on one-yard touchdown runs by Marcus Allen. Frank Hawkins and Jim Plunkett. "They tned not to be intimidated by us," Raider defensive ~.nd Lyle Alzado said. "Fightma is Just a part of the game. You get frustrated when things don't go your way and you shove back. They just thought if we were going to fight, the>.' were going to fight back." The Oilers fought to a 7-0 half\i me lead on a I 0-yard touchdown pass from Canadian Football league im- port Warreri Moon to Mike Holston but the Raiders started taJuna advan-~e of the Oilers in the second half. 'They did a lot of blit11ng, and m the second half we p,1cked it up and ·took advantage of it,· Allen said. "We also had v.eat field position. lf you get field position like that, )OU should put points on the board." Moon, making his NFL regular- "'ason debut, was neutral about his perfonnance. • "I don't think I did anything to hurt· us but I didn't do an)thtng to help us either," Moon said. "The poot field position in the second half hun u . They were blitztn& me a lot. They were playing o man) dtfc;nsive backs --=-== - Sunday's scores Ralden 24, Bouton 14 lltaml 35, W~a 17 Sall..l'rancleco 30, betroU-27 New E~d 21, Balfalo 17 Green Bily 24, St. Loa.la 23 Saa Dleco 42, Mlnnmota 13 CbJc:aco 34, Tam~-Bay 14 lfT Olanta 28, PblladelpbJa 27 Kan•• Clty 37, Pitabmch 27 Atl&llta 36, !few Orleana 28 l>eDftl' 20, ctaclanatt 17 lfT Jeta 23. llld..l&aapolla 14 that when I was in the pocket I couldn't find anybod}'." It was also the first NFL per- formance for Oiler Coach Hugh Campbell, who combined with Moon to lead the Edmonton Oilers to five Canadian Football League htles. "The silver lining is that the players didn't back down but we were physically beaten." Campbell said. "From the .slandpoint of building a team. wc weren't set back becau~ wc were pl_aymg_such a strong team. ll was a tough baptism for Moon. They really went after the quarterback." Moon. who led Edmonton m the Canadian Football League to five championships, spurred the Oilen to a 7-0 half\ime lead with a 10-yard pass to Mike Holston. who held onto the ball de pile ~in& smashed as he caulht the ball. The Raiders. who wert not shut out in the first half last season. struck back m the third quarter with touch- down runs by Allen and Hawkins for a 13-7 lead. The Raidct5' touchdown$ came on drives of 4 7. 34 and 36 )ard . beginning his fifth pro season. Landry said he ~lievcd his team needed a spark before opening the season and that "I've got a feeling Gary Is the right one to start this game." "It's always difficult to replace a starting player, especially when you consider Danny White's .per- formance," Landry said. "Dann)'.'s been maligned ~cause of our inab11t- ty to get lo the Super Bowl. lt's time to see what Gary can do. I wouldn't hesllate to put Danny back m." Whitt became the starting Daltas quarterback m 1980, after tbe-rettre- ment of Roger Staubach. White guided the Cowboys into the NFC championship game m each of his lirst three )Cars as a starter. but he lost each time. Then came last )Car when the Cowboys were eliminated early in lhe playoffs by the Rams. . The Cowboys will~ trying to win their 19th opener in the past 20 years. Dallas has reached the playoffs in I 7 of the past 18 years. while the' Rams have qualified for postscason play nine ttmes in the past 11 years. Coach John Robinson, with a health> Enc Dickerson manning the one-back 9ffensc behind quanerback Vince Fcrragamo. has every intention of making it 10 of the last 12. .. It's aJway exciting to play some- one like Dallas in your opener. but we must keep in mind we're pla)in_ga 16- game schedule and hopefully an even longer one:· Robinson noted. .. We had a good prcscason. one 1n which \lie made the kind of progress we feel is necessary for us to become a championship team. We're 0-0 now. though, and ready for the start of the season:· The Rams \aierc 2-:? in the preseason. while the Cowboys -Aere 3-1. - The Cowbo)s ha,·e a ne" look entering the season. Gone are such standout pla~rs as wide receher Drew Pearson. tieht end Bill) Joe DuPree. offensive tackle Pat Dono"an. runnin_g back Robert Newsome and defensive end Harvey Manin. aJI of ...,hom retired smcc the end of the 1983 campaign. The Rams. meanwhile, ha'e (C"A · new fa<%S and SC\ eral whu;b were there a )-Car ago but not often seen. Ban) Redden bad an imprcsStvc prescason ·spelh..ng Dickerson. He picked up 245 yards on 33 carries (7.4 average) and scored three touch· down( He is backed up by Dwayne Crutchfield who adds a power-run- ning dimension to the offmsc. And. thett•s Olympic sprinter Ron Brown who really adds a dimension to the offen as a Jong pass thl"Ctlt. Brown . caught but one pass 1n prcsca.son. a SS.yard bomb from backup quarterback Jeff.Kemp. As for Ferrapmo, the Rams quar- terback had a.n adequate prcscason, hitting 33 of 63 passes for 339 yards. ..., ........... .,, ...... lngton Beach Sanday by defea~g Australian CJaeJae Boran in the final round. .._ Tom Curren of Santa Barbara ·captured the third annual Pro Sarflna Cbamplonahip before 16,000 f&n.8 at Bant- C U RRE N LETS WAVES .DOT ALKING He rides the righf wa ve a t right time and captures pro surfing champions hip By JOE DUDEVOIR De!IJNetC.1 1111 .-.t Professional sµrferTomm' Curren likes to keep to himself. but ht doesn't ignore autograph scckcrs or tum l\\'t) from 10ten·1cws. He is just a man ol few words and tittle emotion. That changed Sunday afternoon a 1t wasCurrcn raasmga tnumphant fiM to a crowd of appro 1mately 16.000 and breaking out mlo a Cheshire gnn after tumina back Che)ne Horan in the final round of Ocean Pacific's third a1mual. Pro Surfina Ch:tm- pion hip at Huntington Beach. · Thie. )Car's contc t was "onh $64.000 m prile mone) and t:!O entrams battled the da)s to reach Sunda)"s final , pots 1n both men· and \\Omen· cata one . Curren, a Santa Barbara resident. "' ded through four rounds of some of the toughe t compct1t1on m the \\Orld before hi 45-mmute. one-on- onc duel .with the .\ustralian Horan. Curltn '.took home S6.000 and a Ood e Turbo Z car for h1<, '1ctor\. Horan earned $2. 700 for taking second place. Prior to the title match, Horan felt confident of h1 chance becau of the change in surf. \\1th the Ude ~0»1\8 IA.. tioian.figwcdthc.bauJc "'ould ~fought clo'>C to hore, v. here he \\Ould ha'c the ad,antagt because ofhis surfboard· de ttn "M) fin Y.'aS made b) Ben Le,ccn. the same gu~ v. ho made the kttl for .\umaha II. It has the qme design and allov. me mott maneu\erab1ht) 1n malln v.uc and the "hore break ~h board 1s af a lot fa,ter than Tomm· •. I'm lookm fof"<\ard}o in C'.\Cllm final ," Horan said Cum.-n v.-a~n't bU\ ng an\ of ll. ho\\eH·r "I don t · mk h1\ Q<>ard gl\cS him an' ad' a ta e. The ad,an- tage he ha\ e t e~pcnenct. I have no stra 'fortht final. Ju~t • wm. "I thmk that one "'"a' e -.-a real ctor," umn said,.. I~ thec:ro d wa .. reall) ~hind me. I feel ioo<S. It' the fi~t time r,c ever ten Che nt •• Horan ~1d "I than~ his big ~ve dr<1ded 1t. h -...-as a great \\-ave and th<'' usaulh come to the "'inners:· ' . (PlCuc .e CUllR.E?f /82) McEnroe~· G~nnors bre~Ze; Lloyd shock& ;Kr1 k . Winslow says he~s retiring No. 15 Barbara Potter wins her match. but she faces Martina Navratilova n ext .. .. • , - ---- - I SPOR TS BREAK 16 ___ ------- In retirement, Vikings' Gralit com.es up a winner . . . Quote of the day .. Pete Roee, taking over as player-manager of the Cincinnati Reds: '.'L'm Juat llke.,ev8fYbody etse. l ha~two arms, 1WO figs and 4,000 hits. Levi wins with late charge Wayne Levi changed his thinking IO n the nick of time Sunday, going for the victory when he had been ready to settle for second place in the S.C. Open. Birdie putts on the last two holes gave him a 5-under-par 66. the $54.000 first prize and his firstPGA Tour tttle this year. The·31-year-old golfer. who calls this area home and was playing before a small army of relatives and well- w1shers. for a while didn't think he had a shot at the vic tory. "When (runnerup) Hal Sutton went to 10- under on the front nine. I decided to pla) for second ... he satd . . Mary Beth Zimmerman, who had feared she would fail to make the cut, registered an LPGA record eight .stra1ght birdies to card a 64 and draw wnhin two strokes leader Cindy Hill in the Rail Charity Classic. "Jt's unbelievable to make f~ur or fiv~ birdies in a row. You JUSt keep making them. I f~lt hke l couldn't d9 an}thing v.rong." Zimmerman said. Zimmerman has ne ver fin1'ihed bettl'r than 11th in her two-)ear pro career Super Diamond faces challenge . DEL MAR -When 5uper Diamond. ~ trained b) Eddie Gregson. goes looking for his third straight victor) at Del Mar tn ""' toda} 's $20().000 Del Mar Handicap. he won't have to look too far for hii. competition. The California-bred colt ·will fiod a tough three- year-old i.takes winner and a cast of weathered. veteran stake!; performers ready to end his st reak: seven of which have won stakes races dunng their careers. • The Del Mar Handicap's d istance of just less than I'/• miles will be the farther than Super Diamond has raced in his I 3 lifetime starts. He has won six times, banking $20 I ,533. and will have to be at his best to cam his seventh triumph. Assigned 11 7 pounds. Super Diamond will be ridden by his regular rider. Laffit Pincay Jr. and break from post position two in the race for older horses. lhree years old and up. Trymg older horses for the first time. Prcc1s1001st. a three-year-old colt who has won three stakes this year. 1s eitpected to rebound from a dismal performance on the grass in the Del Mar Derby. Two.:-time stakeywmner Ancestral ~ppears to be Super Diainon"d's toughest older challenger. • • • Toronto thump Twin• -.ga1n·· Soviet sets pentathlon record . , H OERSH O LM . Denmark -m Svetlana Jakole\a of the Soviet"Un1on set a world record Sunda) of 5.48 1 points to win . the Women's Modern Pentathlon World Champ1on!lh1ps. Jakoleva's score. breaking the record of 5.433 points by Bnta1n's Teresa Purton. led .her Soviet teammates to team gold wtth 15,3891>9ints. followed b) Poland. 15.174. West German). 15.117. and Denmark. 15.097. ' The United States, leader after three events. dropped to seventh overall with 14.959 points. behind number-six Bntain with 15.028 points and number- five Canada with 15.048. Television, radio· TELEV'810N . - 11:30 a.m., -TENNIS -U.S. Open Tennla Champk>nshJps (taped). Channel 7. 2:30 p.m. -HORSE RACING -Alt-American Futurity trom Ruidoso Downs. N.M., bhannel 9. 4 p.m. -8ANIALL -Angela at Cleveland, Channel5. · . ·6 s:J.m. -FOOTBALL -Dallas at Rams, Channef 7. RADIO 4 p.m. -8ASEBAU -Angele at CteVeland. KLAC(570). . 5:30 p.m. -BASEBALL -San Diego at Oodgera~ KASC (790). . · 6 p.m. -FOOTIAU. -Dallas at Rams, . KMPC (710). A superb paint job ... only $320! Srrtrifr is bduvi1vr ,r<1mt in. 11m1Trrrl1r nrrrjnrr pnmrrd 11v Elrqtm:.. ComJnrr 0111· lfUnlitv n•ith nt/Jrn that am"""" m~m . Elrqn11z ri•t11 111r/11drs n rlrA'' tnp ront f ilu t/Jr t'l:prmtt•r 1111p(lrtJ. 1''1t F.lr.tJa":. pnmt ;nb i1 "'' nmnzi11.n 1111/11c 111$380-lmt,1fvo11 l1ri11.lf m rlu uwpM brlnw v011,11rt "" rufd1tw11a/ 5t'IO ofl~ JV.!(} ,\I U /'OR I HOl /,I I'~/{/) < fl\ I I \fl \ I ·11 1 '~N --/fl Miami Wtde receiver Mark Duper prePa.rea to take In a pa ... that eet up a thtrd.;quutel' .. ' touchdo1JD by Jim Jenaen win over Red.sJdn• Sunday. SteelerS:-Saints also _upset;-New England 21, Butialo l 7 ·Indianapolis drops opener - From AP dls'patcbes WASHINGTON ~ Dan Marino's live touchdown passes led the Miami Dolphins to a 35-17 victory"oVer the Washington Redskins ih an NFL season-opening shocker. Miami broke loose for three TDs in an eight-minute, third-quarter spurt to gain a measure of revenge for their Super Bowl defeat to the Redskins two years ago. Marino. only two weeks recovel"ed from a broken finger that sidelined him for most of the eithibition season, had plenty of help from receiver$ Mark puper and Jim Jensen and an aggressive defense. Mianu's defenders forced two Redskins' turnovers during that third-quarter • spurt. which eitten<ted a 14-I 0 halftime lead to 35-10. ln other NFh openers Sunday: NY Jets 23, Indlanapoll11 l 4 BUFFALO-Two Steve Grogan touchdown passes in the game's first eight minutes helped the Pa\nots to a victory over the Bills. . • Grogan hit wide receiver Stephen Stamng for a 65-- y~rd touchdown pass on the game's second play.-... NY Giants 28, P~lla4elpbla 27 _, EAST RUTHERFORD-Phil Simms became only the second Giants quarter~ck in the club·s 60-yea.r history to pass for400yards in a game as )le tossed four touchdown passes.to lead New York to a v1qory over the Eagles .. Green Bay 24, St. Louis 23 GREEN BAY -L}nn Dickey passed for one touohdown and ran for anotber to lead the Packe rs to a 24.-23 victory over the Cardinals. San Francisco 30, Detrolt 27 · INDIANAPOLIS -The New York Jets had the . DETROIT -Ra}'. Wersching's 22-yard field go.al distinction of winning the first regular NFL game ever with four seconds remam1ng lifted the 49ers to a 30-27 played 1n1ndianapolis' Hoosier Dome. taking a decision victory over the Lions. over the team that had moved from Baltimore in the off-.. season. Pat Ryan passed for 163 yards and two touchdowns to Mickey Shuler. carrying the Jets over the error-prone Atlanta 36, New Orleans 28 NEW ORLEANS -Gerald Riggs. subbing for mJured star William Andrews. ran for a club-record 202 yards and two touchdowns to lead the Fa-Icons to a victory O\ er the S;lints. Colts. · ~ Deaver 20, Cincinnati 17 DEN VER -Quarterback Gary ~ub1ak came off the bench to replace the injured John Elway and engineered a· 75-yard. fourth quarter scoring drive that lifted the Broncos to a victory over the Bengals. San.Diego 42, Mi~nesota 13 MINNESOTA -San Diego's Dan Fouts and Wes Chandler hooked up on a pair of early touchdown passes and newcomer Pete Jobnson scored two more TDs as the Chargers embarrassed the Vikings. Chicago 34, Tampa Bay 14 CHICAGO -The Bears tamed mt~rceptions by linebackers Mike Singletary and Al Harris into third- quarter touchdowns and rolled to a victory over the Buccaneers. It was the BearS' first opening day triumph since 1979. when the team last made the NFL playoffs. Kansas City 37, Pittsburgh 27 PITISBURGH -Todd Blackledge. making his first pro start. passed for one touchdown and ran for another as the Chiefs turned four Pittsburgh turnovers into scores for a 37-27 victory over the favored Steelers. Blackledge, in his second NFL season~nd subbing for tbe inj\Jred Bill Kenney, fired a 22-yard scoring pass to former Saddleback College star Stephone Paige midway through the third quarter to boost the Chiefs' lead to 31-20 . Blackledge completed seven of nine passes for 87 yards during the drive, in which the Chiefs were twice penalized. Rawhide breezes to regatta win . ,Py ALMON LOCKABEY DlllJ Piiot SN_llng Writ... Rawhide. co-skippered b) Bill Murray and Kenney Kuhn. Capistrano Bay Yacht Club. made a fast run Saturday in the 32-mile race from Long Beach to Dana Point. co-sponsored by Shoreline Yacht Club and Capi!>trano Bay Yacht Club. A brisk 18:;.knot wind sped the 63 bo_?ts in <1\e Performance Handicap Racing Fleet around the 011 islands from Long Beach Harbor to Dana Point. Rawhide finished with an elapsed time of 6.14 hours. Handicap results· CLASS A -I. Polish Pnncess. Jack Bent. South Shore YC: 2. Hetaira. Scott Atwood. Alamitos Bay YC. 3. Nowhere Fast. Steve Crooke, Shoreline YC. CLASS B -I Caroline H,,t..awrence Hiiiman. Little Ships Fleet. 2. Class Action. John Monkvic. Navy YC; 3. Chubasco 11. Eldon Foltz. Capistrano Bay YC. CLASS C -I. Sunshine. Dennis Humphrey. Cabrillo Beach YC: 2. Holo Kiki, Rick-Raff, Capo BYC; 3. Pajo. James Llvesley. Dana Point YC. CRUISJNQ CLASS -I. Digger Too. Robert Ouelletts. Shoreline YC: 2. Joint Effort, Bruce Bougher, Cabrillo Beach YC: 3. Menehune. Bob Scherer. Capo BYC. ANGELS FALL, 5-3 ••• From Bl • I Beniquez charged the mound. arms brought in Dave Righettt one out and swayinaarulheadhobbing from side, the.bases empty. to-side as to show Fontenot he was· · R1ehctt1 blew three fastballs by asking.f-0r..a.wu .. But before Ocnique.z R-esg1e Jackson for the second eut. could dig in, Fontenot threw his gJove and McNamara let lcfi-hander Rob at him. catcher Rick Cerone tad.led. Wilfong hit for himself, Wilfong him from behind and first baseman walked as did Bob Boone. before Don Mattingly delivered a tumbling pmch-h-ittcr Mike Brown ended it body block over the tno -and blood w11h a sthke out. bath began. The move did not settle well with f\1eanwhile. Dav~ ~tnfield was rece11tl) veteran shortstop Rack gettmg the 'best of Bnan· Downing, Burleson. who 1s back on the ex- Sconiers went after Vk Mata (for no panded September roster. apparent reason) and Yankee hitting "This (bicep) organization." co3ch Lou Pinclla was being re-Burleson said af\erwards. ..If thty strained by home plate umpire Marty' would call up ;tn infielder (from the Springstead. minor leagues) they could've )'ut for "l didn't think I did anythina that Wilfona. Instead. he has aot to fa~c bad to get thrown out:' Sconiers said the toughe.~t left-handed reliever 1n "l was more surprised that he (Mata) the lea ue. -L didn't get t'JCCted. I feel tha(I iOl the ANGEi. NO'TtS -Tile An0et1 wlll now do f " wl\al 1~·ve done bes au Haaon -Plav on ll'lt worst 0 It. ro.d Thtv'M Oflen I lhrH·oame HI In Clevtland There was al'\O a baseball gnme lonlOhl Cl.JS PST> "Hte '•I lllls ••'o• YOU want d • ' Jo oe orttdv.'' ~n•l>fl' Jetlll McNamara Mid Un ay. "Wt"Yt \utl 001 10 ktto wlnftl1111 encl onlV be f •"' L t th Olh " fT ~etntel with ounetves Wt C0\114 n. .. t t•111td r .. u ynn wen ~ Ct wa,, O on Minn"'°'' ~" Wt knew 11111. Bui tod•Y one of Fontcnot's low fa.,th31l~ in the thal'S wllal't 1rrlla11n11 about Iha whole lnlno first inning for a thl\"C•fUO homer, hut Wt NMO Oul 10 I lt1r..-.r1111 I d and wt Ctll'I that WI) alll the o\ngcls C"'"ld g'"l, hold II. Tll4v /t INtw York) OttietllY o .. vlne lor "" ' f\01111110 " • More on Iha brawl "~•• "'"' l In the ninth innin~ when the Remat'lldll wu "'>I ontv trv1no 10 IM'u'1'1 rt>t Anach had a chance to come bac~. tiac11. 11u1 ha was 1rv1no to nit "'• • ~ , ~ctMtn .. 10 .. ,....., no ftff4 to 111tow •' New York • rmsnnier " og1 Berra anvboelv ' 11 .. CI. Ht Wat trvlno lo llurl mt .. r---------------~ Special Discount ~60 off! I 1/12311a +7111x per mo. .. l'n•" 1111111, ""'I~'"" h, ,.· "'" ""'' r """ I , ,, ~·"" r lltll "'" .. ,., ......... ~ "'" '''" .... "' I ufl lh• IV(lll.n '"" \ 1/IO f'"" I ..... ,, .1 ''"" .. ,,, I 0#1 •• .,,..,.,, ,.. I f"'HH ,..J, I 11(1())} ff) II I\ °M , .. ·------------ . .. "" • ,,_,,.... ~. LOtdt<I with T·bar. Air-eof)d1t1omno. teroo et tt , t>OWtr windows. end many othtr features , 60 mo c/ostd end IN cap cost"St5.1,2, down otY· ment $1311'72 etlh or lrld ($fr 023661) All Clrl Wb}OCJ to prlOf ,.,. • #,. i.. I • • A N ua °°" StrMt. Ntwp&, '*" · 714.933.1300 • CURREN WINS TITLE •.• ,,.om Bl · ' :l f oR THE RECORD :=...____ ~ ~--= - -------- . 'W' • • • • . " MAJ'Ott!':L AGU &.EAO RS ~nLM Oltrwtn Fl'ldan 'll'f't\) ATTtHG (320 al titl•I WlntlJ Id N-Yorll, 352, Mall Hn. York, .l49 Mutrav 0• tim!)ft,, .:ut ltrbtlti, MlnnflOta .Jl7, R en, I 11 e ..!t&. NFL UN\ V11rtl &oston 1CS, H t\OI\ .. , 0.11.lan<J If W. JO, ew Vor , tf HATt<»tAL. COHPllt HCE ' AGUI STANDINGS B~f '\.Cltvlltf!O, oun 1k ltnott ~nt T ~ ,_F P'A an..r••n L .. _,. ltOI l(lllGIT\ln, C>akl4nd, JOI Mvffl'f A11t1111 I 0 0 I 000 S. DIVISION alllmor•, 103. Rke. Botton 101, Arma. n t:rand•co 1 o O 1 000 M Ml""-'°'' P'•!l.lli t/iy A!lt'lt Cnltt oo 0.lllend Tt•H ,. . .,,. Detroit Tt:'rCHltO 8tfllmore NtwVorli. 90\IOll O.vtltllel Mllwt " W L ,.ct. 01 loston. '9, Otvt•, ~tlllt. ff Ram> O O .o CIOO 00 '9 tl ,....! HIT$;.Mt1tl119ty, New York l/0, It e , New Orltant ~ ~ 0 .000 lt .. .. ,_, 1 8alllmort J•~. Gi re:• :r~on1, 1'1, Win· Cnlu 0 f~ 0 r=c'=-.,._._,,.......,, ~ ~. ::~ ~~ ~'::'• Ntw Yori\ 14?, FraM'.'o C~ lie!, Grffn Bt1 1 o O • '3 ,. • "° 6'h • OOUe LeS ... ,,,," ,.~ .. M. Mitt l)O• 0.troll 0 ~ 0 " u .m 1 • Iv, New Var>., n Ew•n•. ewon, 32 Bill · ~':°~!v : ·;. g ..... ST o iv'°•slONn ,.. 9 , Tues. 31. G1rclt.-Toronlo, 31 .., ... TRIPLES Col!ln" Toronto, " MO\tbv, ••• ,. .. ., 6'1 TC>fOn.IO, 13, C.lb>()ll, o.troll, t UP\T!IW, NV Glint• I 0 4 1.000 ,. It S7 I 1 roronto, 9. Wltion. l(•nau Cltv. t Ot h• • O· O 0 000 00 7) •2 1 14 HOME UNS Arrne1, 00\IOll, .u Klno. Ph IAOtlOfl. 0 I 0 000 71 17 '3 .sll IS mtn, 0.kltnd, 32, Tllornton, Clt•9ilnd, )0, St LG4.llt 0 I 0 • 000 2J 72 ._. S2' ISh Pe•r ~. Ot lroll, 29, l t\1111 y, MlM!Mllt Wotlllnel 0 I 0 000 17 " 17 4d 27~ 21 AMa lt!SAH CONF•ltlNCa 5' · IO '12 311°' STOLl;N ltASES Henotrt0n, Ooti.a.r>CI. WHf 11 00 11 ,. lS - SlHMMY'a ktres 50. COlllM. Toronto, a ,.tnli, A"'91a, u 1 o.tlver I 0 O '000 20 11 N""' :York S, "'""" 3 .Butl9r, c eltncf, 47, ~ordl, T0<onto, :tt ICJ""'c ., 1 o. ~ -~.. ~~ Tor ~lo 6, ~It 0 PITCHING 01 dedtlOM) LMl, Torento, ll idws l \0"':" ... ~°h 'f t " ;.. .:enut tuv •· Chlc•l)O • (10 ""'"'' 13·•. 365. t!~en. Cltvti.rio, IS•S 1 OI <Sin Otto I If·:~ ·1 ~41" ~ "'· Cltvt!a!ICI I. 80SIOll) SI ttl, TOt'OOIO, 14·5 2~. Ale!!tndor, fjHC• S.tnle 0 0 ~· "'' 00 " •. • ~ Ottrg.I j, Oakland ) Ollto, 12·S, 3 '90. Nitkro, New Yoo, 16 7, Centnll 1 ' .,,. I 'lllTIOI• 4, S..•111 J J 11 Cltwtllnd • 0 0 0 :000 • 00 • Oo Mllwtulo.et ., Te .. ,, POO rt•n STRIKEOUTS. Lt111ttton. U.tllt, 107, Cine Miil 0 I 0 .ooo l7 20 TMIY's .. ,,,.,· • • Witt, ..._.,, IQ; StleO. Toronto, ISt, ~tOll 0 I 0 000' U )4 ..,...., (SlllOll 6·6) ,, c tY ... l'ICI l(OMet. ~OUO!I, Tt11H. ~40 Mou I o.trou .. I~. ·"''"'~0!1 0 1 0 000 v 37 • 3111. (n) · • -Notlcro, New Yofk, ltt..-•91t 0.llalld (M.cC1ny . 1 1,1 •I Cllkaoo SAV~S· Q\il$ell*rv .... ""' Clly, M. Milm I 0 0 '000 l5 11 Bears .. ~, ... ,~·--14 (11M1,1er 12 11 ~ • Caud •. 0.lllt.nd. 17 • ...,111,,_1, Detro t New Ef!O\lnd 1 0 0 1000 21 , 11 , " -..... _.. • lo11on 18ovd t •tl al Mtlwtullte 7'! Devos, Mlnntsott , 25, FlntMf's, Mil• NV Jtl\ I 0 0 l 000 1) 14 IScwt tly CNtrtwO 1Coc1no .... ., l ·l•I WI Ullff, 23 lc;tt•to 0 1 0 000 ,, 21 Ti m .. •n • I • ,_ , .. Tor0ttlo (Lii' 13·41 11 New York <Cow· • lndl1111POI' 0 1 0 000 14 ?l . C~ > It 14 7-)4 1tv 5'11 Netlonal Leatu• SllMav'• Gtmes ,..," ,.triN 8111linor1 (01v1' 12·71 II O.lrg.t (°nlr.vtfl F~'l't ... MM) lttldtf'' 24, Hou\IOfl 1• Cnr-FG Tl •(I'll 19 ) •S (Morr.• 17•f), (n) 8ATTING 13~ 11 1191\) Gwynn, San Mltml 35, W1sn11111on 17 Se<.nPtrlH SHtltt ILtnpllOn 13·•1 11 Tues Olt9o, .356, Slndbert, Cllk190, 326, Pulll, Sin F'tl\1'Chco l4. 0.lro.I 27 T8-Ct•lt 74 l'eH lrom TllO~ .. .... ri• •• . . . <T1n1111 1•·121. 1111 . HOt111011, ..319, crua, Houston, 31S, Htvtt, New Eno11no 21 8 ulf110 17 IArlfl kick) 2 4> • reumiv1~ tJ 'iT 1(1aon'ii11:A,rrl'fyr--1911tltedllimtr.:~r---::----:::--------~~i, a1¥-.U..~..J.A:lW1u;u. _______ QU:FGJ!!laalAl U...US ' _..._,,_ ____ _:....w,;..;.;~::.;.;....:..;.~;.::. lllldl. 14• 10), (n) RUNS s~tidbtro. ClllCIOO. 99, WIOOlftl, Sen 0 eoo 42, M•l\ntlOll l3 ~..:· C114-McM.t!'IOn ' run fTnomt• Ir.I~) r.7m-C::n!W;'i;:i',,;,,,...--- • TllHdlY'• Gemes Sin Oleoo. tl, S.mutt. Phllldttplll1, '°· ClllCI DO )4 T1mo1 ... ., 14 1120 """4• 11 Cltvlltnd. (n) . ~l1hew1. Chlcaoo, M, RalnH, Monlrttl, Ntw Vortt Glt nl1 28. Phd1dtloll11 11 --flreltlmore,1 Dtfro1r. uir Mlnllfl011 al K1n111 Cllv,"cni RBI: C11rttr. Montreal, -s. S<hmldl, A1t1nt1 3•. New Orte1n1 I Toronf& 11 New Vor)., (nl Plllledelt>lllt , ti: Cev, Clllc1110, J4. 0 1vl1, 0111vtr 20, Clncl[llllll 17 Stt lllt 11 Tt11H, (n> Clllc100, I•: Leonerd, Sin Frtncl\co 12 New York Jtls 13, tndi1111P01l1 I• Oaklend ti Cl!ICtOO, (n) HITS Gwvnn, St n 01890, 115; S.n<Jbero, TtdaY'• Gtnwl 80\1011 ., MllwlUkff, (II) Clllcall(). 17•. S•""*·· fltlll•OtlPl!ia, 1'2. 011111 11 R•m• IC111nntl 7 .. 6 I> m) Crur. HOU$IOl'i, 1!11, Ro1ne1, MorllrH I, 15' CltYelln<I ,, ~ Sin 0"90 Hou"Oll Ati.tr1l1 - OMeln Hltlonll LNf!M WU T DIVISION w ... 71 Sf " " " 10 64 73 Sin Frtnt•KO Clnclnnell S7 1' S7 to Chictgo New Yon Pflllt<1tte>n11 St.Louis Mlltt!rttl PlllSOurlll'I usr OIVISIOH • 12 S4 77 59 n ,, .. " " .. SI 7t ..d. S.t 504 .., .. 7 419 ·" 603 5" ~I 507 4" 42• Ge • 1117 14 20 1 21 s I l 13 u 1 · 2li'1 SUMf'('S SctrH MOlllrHI • OMeln 0 • , Cklelnntll 7, Pltllbl.ir9"1 I Phli.tdetl>h11 I , S4i'I FrtnctKO 3 Ntw Yorll l, San O•eoo 2 I 12 lnn1no11 Clllceto 4, Ali.nit 2 $1 LOI.Ill 4, HolnlOll 1 TtdtV'tOemtS S.n O•eoo (Thurmond 11·7> 11 Oedeer• (RWS.S 2·•1. In) Plllsburon IMcWllh1m1 1·9) al Monlrtll IRooers s-121 Chlcaoo ISutclitt• ll· 1) 11 Pllll1<1et1>hla IOtnnv •·5) Cl'1.CIMt11 (Runtll 6·ISI 11 Sin Fren-clsco (Grtnl 0 2) New York I01rllno 11·5l 1t St Lools (An<lul1r 17-11>, (n) Houslon <L•Con 7 ll ti Allan11 IP9uz 11'6) <nl Tllfl4lllY'• G1mes San o"'° ., °"""· (nl Clnc1Mt ll II Sin Frenc11eo Houslon 11 1.1i.n11, Cnl p lfSb<lrVll II MOtllrHI: In) Cl!icloo 11 Pnll1dt11>hi1, In> N-"Yofll. ti SI, Lovls lnl AMERICAN LEAGUE Yenk.-s S, A.nelf• 3 HIV¥ YOAK CA&.,,OltHIA Mechrl>" Fol?b Mt1191y ID W.nlitl<I rl l t vtor cni Grttf1v11 Po rulO lt> 0Morlftd 'tronec l tlr ll!M 11Hllb4 • 0 0 0 8t<11<1utrf 2 I 2 O 5 0 I 0 Ptll1I cf 2 0 0 0 S 1 I I Grict> 1t> l I 0 O S I 7 0 Lvnn ef • 1 I 3 4 I I 0 OtCncs JC> 4 0 O O 4 a 0 0 Oownollil If 4 0 2 0 2 7 I 2 RtJk1n dn • 0 0 0 2 0 7 0 OM1Htr lb 2 0 I 0 lOl.1 Wllfot1112b 1000 Boontc lO IO Schof1ld " 2 0 0 0 Ctrt# oti 1 0 0 0 P1cclo10 u O O O O MCl rn Ph 1 0 0 O >4 S t S T ... h l> l 1 "1 Score bv l"'*'es H-Ytrlr 000 Oil OlO-S Ctflfwnle >00 000 ooo-l G1mt W1nr11no R8t -Cerone (7) OP-Ntw York I, C1ll1ornl1 I LOI-New York I , C1lftornl1 6 28-Wlnllttd, : 81Vlor, l e111Quu 7. Boone HR-~tllnotv (20), l. vnn I 111. S8-0Mor1110 , 1 Ill SF-P1tl11rulo Ntw Ven Fontenot ..\Ho""eOW,7·• ltlghelll S.23 • • • l·l I 2·3 0 ) 0 0 3 0 0 I 0 2 I s 2 c.llfemil Romt•"cl< S 1-l 1 l O O Curt11L,1·2 I l 0 I 7 I l.S.nchet l 1·3 2 I I 2 • HIP-M11c111m bv Romt'l•Clt T-7 46 A-U.SJO "' Aneel aver•tn IATI'IHG Al It H HR ltll ,.d 8tnlOutl m 4t t7 • 36 346 ear-m 31 IS 3 28 301 Brown 121 II 35 • 20 2n Lvn11 479 10 117 II .., 273 Wlll0!'9 , .. 79 13 5 n 212 ~'"9 443 S2 120 II 7S 271 OtClnces 470 ., 126 17 76 261 Narron l?I I l3 l 13 251 SConltrs l'll 12 31 l l3 .2S. Grich 213 41 " IS 44 244 R1 J1ckson 421 S2 .. " '3 m P11111 Miiier PICclolO Boone Sc.llofleld Burleson T9'llll ,. ... Forsell Cortltll S.M'lltl l alln Wiii ltomtn~ KllClll Jotlll Curlis Ktvlmen Sfelon l..1Cor1t Swen OlhtO Tetab ,. ..... AocJMI\'\ l ltuntlu RR tllld• If l rH m i. G1.1trr1r cl Sc: cnc•1 c Lt nc!tll rt ltlv«t I> SM1tal>fl l.IM'IClllY JO 8r1Wlf Ml St•,. HonffdlP Z.ctwv P e rtck llfl Wh01 t T 371,. 51 IS , 79 .m .. I 4 0 0 222 llS I' 24 I ' .20t 37S 30 73 3 26 .1'4 327 )4 .., , II .1'2 0 I 0 0 0 000 4"6 SU t•41 124 S4' .251 ~TCHIHO ,,. H H SO W·L a ltA 7µ., 23 \) ,. 2·1 140 1•'1) 14 , 10 I I 2 20 11 .. ,. .., S·l 721 12'" .. ll S2 I ·• 173 1'2 161 tO 41 10-f 322 702 '" 7S 163 IMO Hl 10H'> 210 57 73 10·11 3 ... 46 h 46 20 S3 ,., • 47 16' ?OJ n 42 M2 4 SS 21.-, 2• t 11 M 457 564) S1 " ,. 1•2 4'2 l?Sl-'> IS? 41 .. •·• SOl ,.,) JO n 13 1-2 us s • 0 , 0·1 lOIO ll 1• ' s l>-1 '00 ... 12~11 lt77 104 •1• ., ... l.tJ •t1eht1 II, Aa,. 6. Coro.fl •, DI~•" 01w10" rt GCtrlr Tb Wll'-<.h )b Flvnn2b ,.,.,..," -.mo,c l$nll!ll D JlllM\. • 1-.J • IU 0 J I . .) • 0 0 0 J I l 0 1 0 1 , I 0 0 I ~ 0 0 l 4 0 0 0 4 , 0 0 • 0 0 0 2 ' , 0 'l 0 0 0 4 I 1 , I ' OOU9 LES Raines, Montr1111 l2, ~rUaV'.J Gtmt Stmutt. PNlad91onia. 32, S.nobt'r'O. cnl-P111111uro11 111 Ne,.. York .-... In> Cl90, 30, Htn<lrldl. SI. Louis. 27, Hubbard, Sundllv'' Ga~ All1n11. 27, Rey, Pitllburgll 27 Clt•tltnd ., Ram• TRIPLES Slndber"v. Chlctoo. 17, GrHf'I 81v ., Rllden Stmutt. Pllll10t1Phl1. IS Cru1. Hou11on. 8ufl110 ti SI L0\111 12, Oor1n, Houston, 11, litvnoldl, Houston, D1ti.1 al New Vorr.. G11111s t, Gwvnn. Sin D·IOO. t, McGtt, SI Louis Dt,,vtr t i Clllca90 9 ~ 0.lro.I II Alltnll t HOME RUNS MurPllv. Al1tnta 21. ~•nws C1tv.11 Cll'Cirmtll Sc.llmidt, Plllltdtfl>h'•, 28, Ctrltr, Montr111, Minneso111 e t PMIO..Pll•• 24, Ch', Cllic.loo 2l, l.10111td, Sin Frtl\• •• New Etttttnd 11 Mitrnl clsco. ~l. TtmPI Bev 11 _N_ ()rlq/I• STOl.EN18 ASES S.mutl. PlliltOtlPll e lndlt ntPOlls 11 Houston 63; Rt illes, Mo#llrHI, Sf; W'99 "'· Sift Sin O'evo II S..11 .. o..tio. 57. Reous. Clncl111111/, 44 , w111on MtflGlv. 5-f. IO New Vorll. olC) • Wtsll1~1on 11 Sin Fr1nc1sco. lCntllf'tl 1 PITCHING I 11 dKl1!ol>1I. Sutclolft, Chi· •1 • D m I UDO, 13·1, 2.92, Horton, SI LOtill, 1•3 3 54. TrO\lt, ClllCl90. 12·5, 3 33; Otrllno. New York, ll·t 3M STRIKEOUTS Gooden, New York, 714 Vllttautta, e>.-rs, ltl1 Rv1n. Hou11on. in. C1ruon. Pl!1lldi1Pl111, 1.u, Soto, Clnc1n· ntll, 144 • SAVES Sutler, St LOUii, )6, Holltnd, Pllll110«fplll1, 28; Orosco, New Vor1...-27, Smllll, Cllk:aeo, 26, Gon1oe, Sin D•evo. 25. 0.. Mir SUHDAY'S RESULTS (SS~ If 4l·dlV ._.,..,.., mMflflt) FlllST RACE.. • turlOllOi. S9ortmo BIOOcl ( Sllma r I 9 60 • 60 3 olCI Altb900 !Orlevel 11 20 • 00 Minitrel Grey IMcC1rron) 2 40 Also rectd· Pre Sook, C.000 TtMoOnl, C"-~· Mol1s..ur Exc1teme!ll, El· lervesana. Gita Who. Hl9111Y Run-td Time. 110 3 S SECOHO llACE. • fUflOCllJS COllffn Crt'9 (Orleo•I t IO s 20 3 60 MtrilVn Jo CS!bo "• l U 20 6 60 PIH!ere ILOIOYl l 4 IO AllO r~. Ma .. ,,.,., Promise, N111tt·, Shnoer. Gori Bitler, Ptnt For Gold. Shol 0' Luck Time I.II 4 S '1 DAILY OOUILIE 1•·71 Plod SSI 40 ' THIAD ltACE. I l " milt• on lurt Doublt Lint (Orleotl 21 •0 I 60 • 60 80,10 IH1wi.v) • UO 410 Rodwttl (CHltne<lel 4 IO A.alders 241 Oien 14 (kwt bV ~rtln) L.A. lttldln 0 0 ll 11-24 Housttrl ;oo 1 o 7-14 SKend P'tr.-d Hou-HOiston 10 Pl» trom Moon <Kempt kid.), 11 41 Tlllf'd Perled LA-Allen I run (kick felled), 3 •O LA-H1wkln1 1 run <~•hr kick). 9 28 Fourth Period LA;-Ptunktll I run (PHI felled) 4 07 LA-FG 811!r 28, 10 45 LA-SatttY on HOY.1•011 hollWlll 11111111v on tnd lOl'lt, II lS Hou-McCIOskev S oess from Moon lKtmof kick> u 17 A-4t Im T .. m Sqt1stic1 LA Hou First OOwnJ 20 II Ru•llls·vtrd• 35· 142 36· 120 PIH•llO yards 17• IS6 Return v1rds 66 SI PHlfl 15-37·0 12·79·0 S.ck1 Iv S-45 3·2• PUflll 7·• I 10·3' Fumblts·IO)I 3· I 3·0 Ptn11I ts·vtrcJJ 11·92 I· 17 T,mtofPoss11son ll•S 2f lS ..,.,!dull stansnc.s ,_USHING-t.cs AllOllH J.l!en 22·13, Htwlilrl' S• 17, Plu"k\11 S· 1•. Kono 2·2.l .> McC•-1:3 Hwst9n, CttnPbe 25-92. ~11rtv 6·1', Jovner 1-9 Moon 4·1 PASSING-Los An~H. Plunkett IS·l4·0-,,, Ao•en 0· 1·0·0 Houston, MOOtl 12•79•0-201 RECEIVING-!.o' ~s Alien S·Ja, Cnrbtenstn 4·S6. 8ronc1' •·61 W11ttoms 1•46, Ktno l·lm1nus 31 Houston, Brv1nt 4·66. M<CIO•k•v 7·5'. DrtUell ?·17 Mo<iar· ty 1·2• Smitn 1·20, Hotslon 1-10. W111oams I I • ¥1SSEO FIELD GOALS-:Lo~ Anot•ll Btllr 40 AISO rt e.ct Or Oily JIU Ot Ptlllt, Su«>sldlie Patrlon 21, Bills 17 Time· 1 43 (Score bv OU•r't9rS) " EXACT A 16-21 ~ •• 11 $233 00 Hew IEl!thnd 14 1 0 0-21 F<MMT..-RACIL 6 lurlOi\iis ----~It 0 3 7 1-11 Fren's Vt ltnhnt (Vlnil) 12 00 6 20 4 40 First l'tti.ct Bold Pollv (Laminct) 34 60 l2 40 NE-Sttrrino '5 Pass lr"om Groo1n Vlvl1n'1 Jtde 8 1G1rc11> 4 oo !Frtnklln kick) SI Also rtced NNm•e'I Girl, M• Windy NE-R1msev 3 DISS from Gr0911n -Road, Tridlv Turn, a .fl•lt, reu Rose, <Frenkhn kKk), 7.S7 Mlt 'i Folly, T1m1'' Out!, Pr9CIOul Secencl l'en.d Tlloughls, ~nt1t 8tnk M•ll•C NE-Collins 4 run IFrtnktin k c1<J, 7 11 Time I 11 • S lul-FG Otnelo 27, II Al Third~ FIFTH RACE. Ont m f 8ul-Otflntrel I DISS from FerQusor. Fiesl• Lldv IP1nct¥) •20 400 )20 IO•"llO kiek). t39 0oon·s Btbv (OtithOUHY8) 3 20 2 60 FWr1tt P111M Tr\lllk CS.l>olltl • 20 Bui-Hunter 9 DISS . from FerouW>n Also reced Mint Lett, Amen's Cur· <O•nelo ktekJ, 10 S4 renlltlve Pencil Bo•. POS-hv A-48,s.28 Time Lll • IS lndlVodUll Stafts1ks U IEXACTA 16-?J 1>11d SSI SO RUSHING-N-Eng11nd, Coll•ns 71·13, SIXTH RACE. 6 rvnon11s Tltvou S·n. Grovan 3·1mtnu.s •I 8utt1to, EOum (Oeitl!Ounvel IS 60 160 • 40 8tlt 12·79, M«>re •·?• V,Willl1ms 7· 16, Or Rl'Wa (Lorov•> • 20 l 40 F•r11u1on 3·15, HU11ter 1·•. Nnl 2·2 Pt lftllne Sun IH1w1tvl • 00 PASSING-New Eno1end Groo1n AllO rtetd C1!1tll•'" i Clan. Hit' Al· 1?·22· 1·227 lufftlO, Ftrouson 27·.0-0·2'3 llrrned, Stlo11m. lnl1ntrvmtt1, Clllse Tht RECEIVING-Ntw Eno•1nd Jon.s 4·71. Orl90n. Vlsli. Asset, All Wini. Mvstic1t Slerrlno 3•105. Collins 2·24, R1rnsev 2·13 lrlsll, Htll No 01wson 1· 14 Buff110, Fr1nlllln 10-9'. HUl!t· Timi l 10 115. If S·SI, Ntt l 3·35, 8r00klns 3-JO. Otwkln\ S•'{l"NTH RACE.· I 1116 mitt• on 1urt 2· 16, Otnntrd 1· lS, Moore 2· 13 Finey Wiflts IHtwlevl 2140 7?0 JOO MISSED FIELD GOAU--81.iftalo, Cle91' Talk (LotOVI) l IO l 20 Oenelo 45 ltefltd To Gk>rv (Me11> s 60 Time• I 4t 2/S U SXACTA (4· I) 0110 Ull.50 U ,.ICK SIX C7·•·2 ... J •4) Ptld s37,902 IO will\ lhrte wlnnlno llck•ll (s111 horses). S2 P1c11 Six conso1111on 1>11<1 i4.3n 40 wllll 26 wlnnino liCktls Mlvt norsH ) -e1GHTit1tAtt. t>n.-mil.- Full 0 W1s.d0m IMcCrn> 7 00 P1re1e·s GIOw (TOfO) WtVWtrd Plftlt (Shoemtli.trl Al\o rtctd Gltlt, Mis111n Time 137 2 S 360 no. 700 HO f 20 LS •XACTA U ·ll otlcl SIOI 00 NIHTH RACE. I 111' mt•s Grt"CS eeoeony IPl11eev1 560 J20 ao• Ha11mo10 (Vetenl\lflll 4 oo 3 60 C1nde4tbro IOeloMllliol 11 IO Also rteed P1terno. "°"'oln' R!Jdl Cltlr Vttdlcl._ E•o , .. ,. Artue. Los Port•*• 01a1ee1. Slv ... " Time I 41 U IXACTA 110-Sl 1>114 SS2 SO Allendlnc:t 2"7U • Henri Jet\ 23, Cotlt-14 (Scott tlv Ou•ntnl N.Y,J.n 0 7 t 7-23 lndll111pt11.1 O 1 o 7-14 S.Cond P'triect tnO-OiC11tv 3 run (AlltQrt II.le-> 4 II • NYJ-SfiuTer 13 oasilrom lfvar1 Cl.Hhv 11.lcl\), u SJ n.w.~-­NY J-FG LHllY 79, S45 NY J-Snu;er I OIU lrom Rv•" (kl<ll. t1 tt0). 130f l"tuf'fll Ptried ll'IO-MicJcJlflOll 3 run (Abellt'• 11.lcli.I, 4 !1-4 NY J-li.lltt • fumoot recoverv ILH!W 11.•Ckl, 13 2S A-Not Ave ltb4t tndi'#-., Statunu RUSHING-New Vorll. ML"t• 2'· ll'l. WtU..lf )·JO, Htclor •-13 Minier 1-10 Pt>9t l • HtrPtr 1·2, ltvf!'I l ·l &lrblf l·O 1nc1.an1ootis. P•oe •·43 Ooc1o.ev 12·.a MCMlbt!'I l ·U . Ml<ld1t•011 2-s. Moore 4 ·l PASSING-New Vo,,.., Rvtn U •,, 2•l'3 lndltn1POl 1 PH t l 17·1• 1•19' RECEIVINC.---Nt• Y0tk, Gt'fntv 5·73, Wt er 3-Jt, ~~ 3·>0. Hor11tr l ·t Htctor 1•7. McNeil l·S lnCJ'lntDOl11, Por,., 4-SI, McMlll4111 2·1', 8ulltf 3 34 Sl'ltf.,.m 2•l3, louH 1•20 Middlt to'1 I· 10 MOore l!l. DiCAt-1 1:4. W 2! MISS!D FIELD GOAl.;$-Noo.- 8'.nc•t. 20, aeneeh l 7 • (k-bY~I Cltl<lnnatl O l 1 7-11 Ottwtr 0 II 0 7-» Pactcen 24, C..rdinals 23 St L11111 G,_ .. ., (S<er. bv 0u1r1ers1 1 ... I0-22 • 'O 14 10 0-24 F1n1P'tr*' S•L-T111tv u PHI from L~· tO·OotlOOhut ll•Clo.I II 41 S.Cencl 1'"1Ad GB-Cttrk I run (Gtrclt kick) 1 40 Gl-<offmtn 4 PISS from Oo<k•v CC.tr· Cit k~) 1403 llllrd P""9d G8-0•Ckev I run (Garcia k'Cll) 2;1S SrL-Ancserson 3 n111 (lllelt 11llee11 611 Ge-FG Gere. 3t '51 l"lllr1tt P'.n.d StL~r"" It PHs from Lomu o· C>onc>uonu• k 1e1r.1 l 11 SIL· -FG l)'Oonoo~ 41 • S2 A-SJ.713 ~Stat1111<s RU$HING-St LOCll . Mntn •: ,,..., Ancltoon 11•51 , Love 1·10 Lorn .. l·t, Ferren l ·t Grfffl H·lOl Grffn 8tv, Cllrll ll·Sl Huc•)fby 1·34, E U:s 10-17, Roellltrs 1·3, Ok1o.ev 3-1-SI PASSING-SI Lou\, 25·3S•l·170 Gr"" Btv. 16·22·1-1• • RECE~'lllNcr-St LOY•'· Ftntll 1-n Grltft 3·61, T '°'Y •·60, Merll! 3·37, Mllcntn •·36 L1F1eur 3·76 -'"llfflOft 3·12. GOOdt 1·10 Coreen 81¥, LoftOI\ 1·134 Cottman J·?S !!n s l • 14 Jeffenon t• 11 c trk , •• MISSED FIELD GOALS-Grff!I Blv, Gare•• 29 St Lou.1 O'Oonownue 4S • ~ 49ers 30, Lions V !Score DY Oulrttn) Sin Fr1nc1'C1 1 1 l 13-JO Dttrtlt 1 • 1 1-V "'"" l'tnod Oe•-S•m\ , run CMurr1v k•ck) 10 10 SF-Mo,,roe s PSIS lr"om Monllnt IWtrscn1no klc"> 1500 St<Ond ,.ertod 011..:..Fc Murr111 39, l.Sl SF-Tvttr 2 run (Wtrscn.110 kkltl, 9-59 Ott-PG Murr1Y 43, I• S7--.J I Tliird ~iM ' Ot•-Jonts 2 oen from 01n.e son !Mur· rtv lo.IC!\), 124 • SF-FO Wtr1Cll1no ·.,, u 10 "111'111 ,..,.. SF-FG Wtr'\cllll•O SJ. •31 SF-hit< 9 •un IWerscll11>9 lllCkl, '3S o.1-Tt1omo1on '9 oeu trom D1nle1son (Murr1v k•Cll l, t 59 SF-FG 111tersc111no 72 l•.56 A-S'-7., lftdtlrldutl Stafl$fla \ "USHING-S.n Frenc • .sco. Tvi. 1•·17. c .... t ·l,S R no S·t•. Monroe 2·•. c- 1·0 Detro.I, s.m, 17·'9, J JQf!IH I-JI NICllOIS l·lt, Ot'l•tson 1·16. Jtnillf'IS 1·3 PASSING-St., Frt"C•KO. MM! INI .. ·7S·O·IU Oetro1I, 0 fjl(MI 17·?4·0-177 RECEl'lllNC.-S.t1 Fr1nc1sco S01omot1 4·61, Crt'9 3·32 F•tncis 2·33 Cltrll. 2· 19 Net>em11!1 2·11. Coootr 1·11 . Tvlet 1·9 Monroe l·S OetrO•I, J JClflfl 5·2S, Tnomp· son J·SI Ch1<1w1c11 l·ll, Noellols 2·34 L1wi.s 2·22. Sltm 2·S MISSED FIELD GOALS-tlone Dolphins JS. Redskins 17 IScttt bv OVtrttn) "lrs I l'tr!M 1 1 21 0-35 0 10 0 7-17 M•1-0u1Mtr 2• PHI trom Mtrino f VOfl SClltmtnn ll•Clo.). 13 16 St<Ond ..... WH-Rfgg n' I run IMoleltY i.oc!o.J, l d wu-f'C. Moseltv 3? H •7 M•t -Duoer 74 PIH lro,m MlrtN> (von Schlm1nn k<ll.I. 11 ~ ,.,,.,..,.... M•1-Jt11nn • Piil from Mir.no hon Schl'T'tlln klcll.I, 3 •7 M>t-<llvlOll 9 NH tr_. Mer no (von Scrl11N1111 kiCll ) tOI Mlt-Jtoien • &>en lrOf'tl Mtrino hon 5ctlt'T'IM • ) , 11 S0 Ftur1'1,..,._ W11-J WU11i"'910fl • run !Mose tv cat. 144 A-51.-J IMivillMI Ste •ltn RUSHING-MIMI'\ F ••1111. ,, 1) .. NllNll 10 ff ltnt>tl! •·It Mar-3· ttnl~tl 1 W11!'\"'9ton lt009.ns IS ti WIS notOll l10:SI T lll"l't nn 2·20 PASSING-Ma.ml. Mtrlllo >1·21·0·311 Wulll1>010n Ttt. sm1nn 21 l6 2·~ REC(l'lllNG-ml O~ •·118 Jlf!Stn S·olCI C1t"'1on 3 } I. .lol'.!!son 3, 17 • Rost 2•ll /V'.oofe I I Ce'110 I •2 W1"""9· '°"· ero"""' •·60 J Wes!'\ 1191on n M«iJA 1'-'11 W."'911 2,. It l 7 ·11 Wt er 2·a. G1rre11 1-s MISS 0 FIELD GOALS-Wtsh•f'9t0fl Mbw!tV d 32 Cha,_,.s 42, Vlltlnt1 U lktr• .... 0uer1tr\) 14 1 ,. ... o , • 1 l-1) ttom Fouh • Doti So~" -.G.tw .,.._.., ___ _ , MID« hrtltr 8 llYC•Sl>tf Ooft.hnU.N Cieflt Uttltr Pt•tr Tbornson RodFut1te J m 8-r1>tr I ll .k1t1M IOll CN~'Slftore Ari S(l'ven1r- ~ F1wbull! 84*Goa:Ov I. loflt HtOtrt 70-M-136 ......... l11 64-7>-13' n·•7-1Jt --71-0t .. ·71-Jlt ... ,._,,, 12---140 ... 1':)-,141 11-10-10 n.~m 10-n-42 -,--K11 N19'1 ~to 61·7S.--l&l n-10-1&:1 10-7-144 13-11-,144 7'·10-144 n n-tas n.;:n-; •S B.C. °'*' fet «~-M.Y.) w1vne L.e11 . ss.c.ooo •1-11-11-....-115 ~lds-<odw'tn, S26.4Gll 6t·71·U -67-276 Hal Sutton, Sl• 400 6'·"·"·71>-17' 1 urrv Mia, sll.200 10-.. ·7J·•t-t7t •• Miki Oonaoet. 513.100 '6·74·6t·•9-271 Loren ROCll!'ll SIO •2S 71 •73•6t·M-77' Din Ht")cJorSOll, SI0.•7S 61·n ·10•1t-21't c..orve &.inis sa .100 n-.. -n . ..-2'0 Mark W1et1e. sa.100 ... .,.n .._1'0 Bren UPOtr Sl.100 72·11·'7·70-290 Frid CouP'ft, '7,500 " 70·71·7t-281 Tony JOllnStOl\t, U .600 11·7•·70·67-212 M1111t Lve. $6 600 10·11·70·71-212 Gil Moro111. IS,700 70-7)-.. ·n-213 8ll 8 rlllon1 ss 100 7l-n ·6'-70-?14 EcJ Fiori, U . 100 ... 72.72.n-?14 Tomnw V11tnlint, ss.100 •1-n-10-1s.--214 81R Glt1son. SJ UIS 70·7l-73-6t-21S Howero Twlll'Y IJ. IOS 12·71·7•-..-21s • Frtnk c-SJ. IOS 12· 70· 74·6t-21S Cth11n Pee•e SJ lOS 74 .. 73·71>-21S Tom Purtz•. s3.10S 71 ·6t·7S·71>-21S Garv Kr~. IJ.lOS '9·10-7'•70-215 0111 Forsmt11, IJ, IOS IS• .. ·71·70-115 Pt! Mc&owt'l, IJ, IOS '9•7'·70·71>-llS Jeff M11cne•. s3 105 74·71·6t·71-21S Bo«>Cltrnoell, '3,lOS 13·•7·73·12'-215 0111 d Ootl11, IJ,lOS n •74· .. ·71-21S Unev MJ~. u .105 •9·71· .. ·n-ns G¥Y HaD«ltfg, $2 IMO 10·1•·73· .,_?It Al'Cly Nori!\, S 1,101 72· 70-n· .... 211 JJn Simons, Sl,701 73·71·7>-•,_217 Mll<e PKt., Sl 701 6'·7•·74•70--217 Gr•l1 MoodY, $1,701 74·12·71·70-2t7 Andv Mlllllt Sl.701 73•71,n·71-117 lt1Ck 011POs. SI 701 7•·6'·73·71-117 81rrv JffClr.tl. ll JOI 13•70-n·n-111 T·m Sim&>IClll Sl.320 . n ·11·7S·70-211 Boe> EostwOOd SI 320 11·1• 71·71-211 II.en Kt<•Y Sl.320 6'·11·7•·7'-211 lot> Glider, Sl..320 70-.. ·76·74-211 J1Clr. Fertni, Sl,l10 71•71·74•7)-219 vine:• HMffter. "'° n-10-n-11-m Ptul A.zmg.,, 19'0 12·6t-71·n-1'0 c11r.s Pttr._, '"° ... ,•·n·n-m lttn<IY Wilkins, S'90 73·72·72 7)-2'0 0on Poo1r1. '"° 11 . .,. 11-n-m MOtf'I' H1t11~v. S7~ 13·11·7S·n-1'1 Ktnnv Knok, '1~ 7•·11·11·11-1'1 Miile Hollend, 1754 73•11·75·11-2'1 eruct SO\llsbv, S7S4 73·70·75•7)-1'1 OtvicJ O'Ktilv. S7S4 n -n-73•7l-2tl Ken 8rown, S7Sol 70-7S·7l·7>-?tl Jod.e M;;cJd W11 14 •7·7'·73-2'2 -G.IP;.McCMO ua1 6t 1)•19 11-292 Martt McNUltv S60 73·73·13 n-m 8·' SI"°", $'81 10-'1t•73·71--2'n Meri. &roc411" ~ ~, ... ,...,~ Ito <:1io.,. ... MS7 1~·10 7'•7T-?tl WOOttv Bt.O.Durn, US7 n ·11·1•·1S-1'l J;m Tllonle, W7 )I ·73'7t·7S-2'l voe Reoeltelo i6S1 74·7<>-73·7...-m 8udcJv Coar~. US1 17·10-7>·7t-2'l MICto Cl<..,«dlll, UM 14·10·n ·7>-11M W1Yftt GrldY Mn 14•11•14·11-N Tom.;.., '· '621 1J·10·7•·~N JOey Slnd!Mt. U lS ,._n·7'·ftr-2'7 JtC'IGI ~ '61' .. ·1'·19--1>-1'1 Mtc 0 Grt0v l'°3 7o-'.U •7' ~tr-1'1 ..ltfl SUNn sw 14·n ·13·19-1'1 Mil<• MtC. s5tl ••·n-n.,...._, G b11v Gilbert sStl 7HM•·,1"-l00 Tom L•mor• lSI, 1•·n·1'.J-301 Evwett Ot:left lt t ._..... Wlfl.I Ron Commtll\ , -..oa.1.~ c" en. 1toorv1 .,.,., ttrTI• Cll1r1M aon,,.. lt.it,.,.,.O lOll.ol Tarrv Snodoreu ~ndvO rd )Oft!! McCom.. "' ltt'•I Ai.trcon LD\IGfa II\ P l Fltno.rnon' Rad Curl GreoWN' 11 TomCOl Tom-Jr """' • Geor91 Arl'M't ftfllMurrat $t1¥1 Sa ..,. ... Duflc lrMFaM< Jeff It Ofl'I ... a.s--Artw1 J¥rv&lrDtr I C J.ck fl'ttQ, GordOn Jot!es O;o.. Klnv Orville Moody Ooue S.norn 8oo Sltelmln Al--~.nll Arnold Pa~ StmS-d • M•7tr-U S·T~IU 1•·71-0 11-1-us 15·11>-i.5 ~7S-l4S 10-76·t• 7S·1S.--ISO n U-ISJ 0.. ... ttshlne OAVIY'S L.OCK&:lt (....._, laedl) -274 ...... l'7 llOftilO, J7 wllow'll 11 roct. fiUI, 4 ~'· 21 calico •~s. Jt Ml\CI beU, I 211 m.ck.rel. l2 ~. S SCUIPin, 2 '9!'90, I .C.belOll. 75 bullet 11#'11 HIEWP'OtlT LANDING 1"1-.wt lead!) -5a a~ I~ "°"''° ll DIU 17• ....O.trte 2 roe ti1'L T1'as .... , '""" ~ SAN IEllMAllOIMO -~-V ...... Lt•t Greeory L.111.t RIV•'"'o• -Fulrnor La... ,...,,.... Lt•t Sa!tll ANI It -, S."tt An9 It ft!' 4-111 for'l SAN Ofl:GO -C""ttnlCt L..-e K•RH -Ker" R •tf' <~11 ~ IO Otmocr-11 Dam KU~ ti/I Lt•t lwMllt) TULARE -ICtrn Rhttr IF.,,,,...., 0.f'ft to Kit) l"owtrtlouit, ~ 9"14" lo Fe ....... Dem), TUia River (IOUtl'I forY. °' mt ln forlr. ) MAO&ll.A -S.11 .JM<luln lt1vtf (m lorkl Sotefltf l..1111•, Stert.wntner Liil• INVO -8l•llOQ c ...... (IOwtr, middle, MUii!, lllfaU II), P.ne ~ Roctr. Ct• Lah Sout!I l..~ MONO -lri~I Ret«voir, I~· tvt Crlt4l, Convtci C,...... C>Nomt'l C......_, Elltrv '1..11.t, Gtor9e Like G6eM Cr-.. '-""' la\e Green CrMI<, GUii La u Junt .l..IU~ L.19 ~er....~-"' for*l • .uiu. WI "tr Like .:.L Ille Wllklll' River. l:~ L• • Me-. L1k1, Mtmmo CrMl!.A ,,.,..,,, \; .... Mc:~~,.-Mill ~ .. u-Ow-a vw I Benton Cron, a Sor\nllsl i:tOOt-Cl'Mk, Rodt c,..._ L.l .. e, lfi;ll\ Cfftll. ~ Cttet. ~ La t ~-Crtel<~ ~ L.akt Sw•wer c-r-., Tioo. Lat.e• T!'Uftt· bUI L••• T•Oll L.l&ts I~ (UDOef io-J. T..,111 ~· Mii~ Vlro Cttet. V1f Liles !.,.,...,. wer), W ... Riv.r tChriS Fltt C1"'°9l"OUM to toW!I ,,_Wt If', LMVill ~s C'll'!'ID ll1'0Vfld to Sonof" I Ir iOQlt 1 T Tempers rise Back ju~e Al Jury tries to restrain Raider•' llarcua Allen (35) durlne .cuffle , with Houaton'• Gre~ Bingham Sunday In third quarter of LA• 24-14 victory. East ex guarterhorse easy favorite in All-American Futurity bred to win C unt\\ trainer ot < oppcr Hugs a Nebraska colt expected to~ one ol thl' longshots 1n the I 0-horsc field But 1n quartl'rhorc,e racing. speed is not the onl} lactor and the other n1nl' horses 1n the futunt} got a boo!>! tn their hopt>s for an up'>t.'t lrom Mother "lature Rain. thl' t~fl\: that has plagued Ruidoso Do"'ns this Rt !()()~() CX)~"-. ....., M.1.\P)-East&ll. the latest summer and cau~d an csumated SI million 1n damage to nsmg star 1n the often fragile v.orld of quanerhorsc racing. the surroundt-ng communll). of Ruidoso drenched the 1s the o'"erv.helmmg fa'"onte m toda) 's running of the S:! 5 track during thl' Y.Cekend and' 1nuall) assured a lc~-than­ mllhon All-.\menean Futunt} the 440-)ard race "'1th a fast track for the luturll\. first place put of S I m1lhon "It C<'nccr.n' me:" ~1d E.aste·( trainer. Jamci. Bred to "'1n -hes a grandi.oo of the great McArthur. of thl' "'eathl'r "Hl··d never run in the mud thoroughbred \iat1\.e Dancer -Easte>. has al read~ earned unlll Y.c ca ml' hl·re and I don't think he hkes 11 much. He' more than a half mil hon dollars in his first·9Cason ofral1ng a h1g hor'>l' and d<K'\n·1 seem a<1 \C'curc in thc mud" , and can add another SI mil hon with aw1n 1n the 440-\ard Running on a \lupp) trark Fssl\'.\ ran second 1n the <,pnnt down the Ruidoso Downs stretch fir~t ...._.! nf cl1m1na11on 1rn11\ tor thl' ~II-American. then The 26th t'QJllon of the futunt) which 1!. to da\ l1ghtl·d hi'> oppo\ltllln in the time trials that quancrhorse raclng what the Kentucky Derb)' I!. lO determined thl' 10-horw field . thoroughbreds,.w1Jl bc tclc\ISCdhve to 19\tatC\(Channcl 'II anvoodv tx•at\ r a<,H.'\. 11 \\.-Ill be because lhl' 9 at 2:30 p.m.). cond11wm don t ht him .. ~1d Don f-arn<.,. the trainer of A w10nere1ght of 11 races this season. Eastex captured . the fill\ Budget 1\ppro' al ··The) ma) heat him. but the) a pairoffutunt1es 10 Cahfo m1a this summer. then sh1pJ>l'd wont outrun him" . to Ruidoso Downsand rolled to a near three-length" ll ton \ rarr ol m il'> and t\1.-o lllhes well' 1mpress1ve in the • 1n posting the top qualify mg ti me of 21 .405 second... trial'> and afl· wn ... dercd tht: top t·and1datcs for an upM't That ti me was the second-fastest e'er run b) a 2-~ear-Ral'>l' I he< iambk. dc<,tnbcd b) h!s trainer as a "goof old at the Ne..,.. Me,uco mountain track and kit Im oil hcH\l,.. "'ho hkl·'> wmpet111on will break along!!.1de challengers nouceably impressed. [a'>lt'\ OY.nnl h> Da'" 1d Rn·d~rofFort Smith. Ark.. Raise "He would ha"c to make a big mistake and somenm• Tht• C 1amhk ha' "'<>n thrl'l' of eight races this season and else would have to ru n a perfect race." said ~tc,cn H ha'> run '~nr .. t• than third onl\ once. ·Expos silenc·e Dodgers Montreal'sSmith. James combine for 4-0 victory MONTREAL (A P) -Montreal btpos' right-hander Bryn ~m1 th had more problems with a 'iore shoulder than with the Lo-, Angele' Dodger.. light-h1tt1ng lineup on \unda't- Smith. 10.1 1 \t:attercd fiH Do<lgl·r hit\. but had to com1: out after fi\I: in nin~ when h1\ shoulder \llllc:nc:d Bob James pitched h111c,., hall m l'r the la\t lour 11111111~'> J'> \lontrl'JI \Ulxlucd the l>odgl'r\ 4-11 g1,1nf \m1th h1' tir\I 'it ton \!Oll' luh :?X \mtth"' prohll•m\ lxg:in in tht• L\pt>'> filth, v.hc.n ~1ontrt·al '>l'nl nanl· hatter\ to the platr Jnd \lorn! 1hrl'l' run' "It \\3\ <1 long inning and thl' .,houldcr 11ghtrnl·d up on thl' ha<,epath\.· \aid \m1th "I '"Lil k under thl' '>land'> to tn to thro" through 11 hut 11 nl'\Cr rl·alh kit fluid ·· \m11h gan· ur a ll•<td-otl 'llll~k ,,, R J Rn noldc, in thl' \l\tlt, then heackd tiH thl' <,IH1wer' alter Y.atl..ing Andretti's easy win was not really easy l£X I NC1 r <1~ Ohio t \l'l - Mann ,\ndret11 who h.1, 'lrt•akc.·d 10 the nctotic'> th1~ !ICa~on • .'>aid h1\ bag mC1 rg1n 1n winning Sunda' ·, f:'><ort Radar \.\-arni ng :!00 I n<l~-c:.11 ra'c "'a' H'ry dcc.ept1vc "It was probabl~ unc ol the hard~·,t rucc\ of my carec.·r " <\r\drl'tll \<ml after bcattng -.ccond·placc: Bobh} Rahal aero\\ the lini\h line at M1d - Oh10 Spon ' < ar <our\(' h) J"' 11 second\ -about half a lap on 1 hl' 2 ,i. milt'. I 5·lUrn ~ 11< u11 .. It looked like I had him handled but I didn't rc1tll} " added thC' i.i. )C r·old ndrett1. who led all but ~" ofl• l:api. "Our car .. Y.l'rc rl"all) 'en C'\Cn. I JUSl Sot ofT to a 12\ttr \tart and got a lead C"arl) ... U1s 1nt1m1da11ng red I 1111 T .s<JJ whteh h ' \laned lmrn thc pole 1n U-\.Cn of 11 rall'' 1hi' wa!.on and Sund~) t·amC'd An<lretu into tht' point lead 1n thi-C \R T .pp( 1 ~u.on SCtlC'\. n('\.er IUIS\Cd u belt In the: 200· mill' r;.ict' ''Wt• mu't ha\ l' got l'H'r\thtng right." ht• t•11phunC'J "l wuldn't haH' is~kcd for a bcurr balanct'd ~.11 ot11 thrrt". e'r«11ll~ on u 'l'f'\ 1l1rptr)· trad: from the hl'at .. • Rahal ~1d he M:th h wun'1 h:and· llllg Y.t'll t'fllltl,h l,llt' 1n lhl 13\l' It! rt•all' go alll·r \ ndrt•ttt I "'a' pulling a''·'~ lr11111 1>.lllm t!)ulh,an. \\ho \\a'> Llurd) ''llh .1hou1 15 lap\ to go <ind I 111\t ,,1111 'I hc hdl \\.-Ith ti ' .ind )U\I t:rUl\l'tl thl' rnt 111 tht• wa\ It wa\ no U\t' ll)1nv to pu~h the car loo hard and hlu"' 1n~ 1LLumpk1t·· I .. \. Tht• v.1nnint1-l.1r ~''"'''~"l'cl h\ ;l('tor Paul Nt•wnwn .tnd < h1c.1go tlU\lnl'\\ITlan ( .HI I fa:t\ rq!.llllt'd thl' lcad fur tht• third .1n1I tin;il t1mt' onl 24 lap .. trom th<' 1·nd ol the 84-lar rac"' O\<.'r thc :? 4-mik. I ~-turn < 1r1 u11 at thl' M 1d·< >h1cr Sport' ( ar C nur:-K' The "'inner rarnC'd S44.470 alta aHraging 100 l>CR mph 1n a r.arr unmarrrcl h\ a lull-<oursc rn1111on 1138--• H:th:al dminr.n <'Mo..,.nr<!h Mid · Ohio track owner Jim J rurm n. il(Mt tfro'"' a fl;aY.IC\\ ran~ hut v.u o.nl> able to mo\C p3'>1 the • rC.Ul\C Andrrt11 "'hen thl' la.Utr r111«J for fud and tire:'! on lap 2S and.a ·ton lap 58 \ndrctt1. who no a 41 carc.-rr '1ctonc\ rrp,a1ntJ tht' ,kad COi~ time y, hrn Rahal mad h1~ ruf 'ln(l\ 1>.1nn} Sulh\an. \\ho hu n t"o tlH t'~ in nnnthcr of the.• nt" l t>ln,; "'1'5 third a lap d awn, lollo\\00 b I fn\·~on I ttt1rMkl111f Brulfl \1d Hrcam. \fonm·al Manager Jim Fannmg '\amt· out the: fir4't Umc and left me in hu1 I got a little fi ne Y.t th my p1tchc!I." .. aid \m11h "When he came out again I tried to talk him out of it. but hl· madt the: nght dec1s1on " I 1 m \\-a Ila ch·, sacn lice fl y ga vc \1ontrt·al a I -0 lead in the fourth . \n aror tl} 'ihOr1stop 8111 Rus~ll .and \l.trtc:r Ric k Honeycutt'\ wald- lll"" l..t \c:d the E:<po rall y 1n the fifth . \rgl'n" "ialaLar rca~hed on Russell's t•r ror took. ~cond on a groundnut and mo\ cd tu Lh1rd on a bunt s mgJe h\ ~llltth Volleyball favorites stunned .. .. NOTICI ~ flCTIT10UI euw11 ftCTmOUI ._.. 9'TIJf110N TO 6 M COUNTY NAM1 ITARlmfT NMll lfA,_..y MM. ..,....TY IUNNOA COUM ht fQllOWlflg .,. 1he lollowlnO .. • A Y MYATI U1a •• ,, • ...-·-............... dolrllJ ,bullneM• No" 1no1e • ,... ,,, __ .... _ p T;\iR UIT. 21 TlfE FORTAAH OOCTOR;' "' the SuolrlOr Court OI • --~~~n. ~ t. HuntlrlgtOn 8Mch. 112.U•muda DrM, Cotta tM e of c.1tott11 fOf 4 a rnlnof bY ,_ Gultdl8n Ad Ce11t t7e48 fMH, CA tM2t C~ of 0re11Qt AH'rOHlA J TROYER Mont. Gtuatld. 1 ....... ~.._,_..~ In the Matter°' the -~~ AHO ANTONUt;# VS., , Huntlr1ftOll &Md\J ~J? !:~ ~":"'-ijfROY OAATTISCR!A; Di= RENOA IA"'· a minor by t2148 ....,.,a-·""'..,_.. ~ '* Guardian Ad U1em. ltnMt =Lona. 826 AJberte Jane Partler. ~ 12• HOTIC ti H ,.. y 2 LINDA IART ANO LINDA 111'1 ·~Hun on 8Mct\. a.mucsaon.c:ottaM-. QIVfH that, .. nine o'clOok BART Cell1 926'1 CA 12621 a.m on .... 10trl drl Of,., oetendent• CHA,.LEY Tfllt bu1lnna ta con• Thia t>ullMe• t• con· i.mt>er. 19M, °' U.."- MACK CAMPBELL, JR .. due:ttd tJy. e o-n«el l*t· dueted by: Hutlttind tl1d wtUlln the time at10waO by MA"Y IU.EN BURKI ANO netthlp wtt.J N...., C""'......._d lnr, et 1n1 8. Eucncf, • 5 6 . . 7. ·. ·8 · D A I L y p ·1 L 0 T • c L A , • s s I F I E D 6 4 2 •• 5 6 7 8 OOEI 1 thtougtl 30, In· OOuo Lono wnee ""' ......... ,_ AnaMlm. callfornta, o , CIUIM Tillt .Cattfl*ll w• flled Thi• tt~t .,.. tlled BORAH A ,llCHER, ,. Id-e... No 11118, With tM County Ci.tl Of Of': wltl'l IM County C!-k of ~r· minlSlratrll( of lht Eltat• of llWONI enge C01.Jnty on Alrl;utt 14, = Countv ~ ,.~ "• • tM .~,,.,,_, deoeO«tt, NOTICIJ YM U... Men 10M '. 1 naM1 wt• ... et ,,,i119te .... the ..... 'TN-'MeJ....... • ,..... ~Of,... PfOPart't tttu·· ....... ,_ WHMwt ,_, Pul>lllNd Ot-.. C0Mt P\lbllahed ()f.nge OOdt elect In tile Qty of AMMlm • ....... Mwd .,,._=,. o.11y Piiot AuQutt 20, 21, 0.itY PllOt ~bat S, 10, Ccunty of Qtange, 8t$ Of loend....... MM ~I, fb. 191-4 t7, 24, 19M ·,.... callfomla, OOtNnQnty ci.IO-IM~ • M·110 ,..1 ... nated .. 507 ~ !rOder, 11 ~.-to.-theed· Anaheim, Cellfom... and Ylce ot en ttt~ In tN9 more~~ matter, Y01.1 lhou6d dO eo PtBJC NOTIC£ rta.IC f«)llC( • tolOwl . prQfnl>tfy .o that 'fOlll Wtit· Lo1 7t of TrK1 HSI • ten r~. If any, IMf be flCTITIOUe ..,..... fllCT11'10Ue .,.... pet met> NOOfded In lkM* fbed on time • MAim ITATlm#T .. ,,_ tTA~ '7t, P-O-1 to • of M AVllOI Utted he llldo.. TM follOwtnf ~ la The tOllOwlne pertona If• ~ M• In the.Of· menOllde. £J 111bumll ~ fOlno bUelMM.. do6na ~ea: 11oe Of .,. ~ or Mid deddW c.ontni Ud tin ... Mrc"OMASTI" SYS-DANA fllOeHT LEHOINO, Orange eounty. ~ • l1*lOe que Ud. ,. TEMS, 221 MOtnlt\Q Cttl)On DAN.A POtNT FINANCIAL: The ~fa ltlt_.... to IPOflda dfntrO 4a $0 di. Ad , CorOtla dll alar, Cellt &ERVICU, OA"'4 POtNT be 9old _. be .. of Ne/her l•• •• lnf()(mec;Aon que t2t25 • . • MOATOAO!; DA.HA POfNT r1gtlt, •ltle. Inter• and .... llaue " Lora Colby, 221 MQrNnO PAOPlRn' DilHA POINT 1ase at ti. *"9 of'* or her )tyouwlllttto...icthe.S· Canyon. Ad , Corona dei tNVf8TMENTI, 2012 dellUlanOllrtgfi'l,t!Ua,lnd ~ of an attorney In Ihle Mar, Call1 t2t25 · o.na Maple, DeN ftolnt. CA Int.,.. that decedent'• • matter. you ~ dO" to Thi• buelMaa I• oon-m2t ~· tlM acq.#ed « ,.,,..., promptly eo tl\91 'tOUf writ-dueted by-an lfldMduet 8uHn J. Lukanovlch, herdfl• ~ · ten reeoonee. If any, may be 81...,. M Colby • 24912 Dena M.,._, DeN The .... d be made to flied on ume. Ttlll t1aternent wee llled ,olnt, CA 12129 the hlgheet tl1d bast bidder 81 Utted ~ eotlol1ar et with '"-County Clettl of Or-Thia butt MM I•. con-eu1>1et;1 to the tarme and conM)O de un abogedo en enoe County on AuOUt1 1•. ducted by, An lndlvtdual condltlont '*elMttw • •l• a.unto, debtrt& Motrlo 19&4 6U9an J . Lultaaovlct\ tottn ·and .Wfect to con-~·· -_.._..._ Tiiie .......... wee Ned ~eiydlaatpn*"11 maner•. •u rHPUHt• PubhMd Orenoe Cont wttf1 the County Cleftt of Or· tied eoutt. eecttta. ti ha)' atgllna. l)Uede DalW' Piiot Auguaf 20, 27. eno-county on Augutt 27, Bid• .,. lnvtled t0t the .., reQ!Strede a tlempO. • Sept91nb« 3, ff>, 1984 1984 prope11y and must be In wrtt- 1-TO TH! OEFEHOANT: A • .M-113 ,...., ing-ancf:d bie teoet.oed at llnt1\ -Published Orano. CoMt tbeottloeof"JackW.Oolden, by ttie pelntlft egalnat you. 11 •um •c W\nrr Dally Piiot Septembat 3, 10. Eaq.. et 2700 Wu• you wtafl to defend tnlt i.w-r-. ""'~ 17. 24. 1984 aeoera•rom .••• a.nta AM. *'"· you mult. within • ,ICmtOUllU .... a M-12t calforn1a0t-...edlothe dayt after tfllt eurntn0f19 la MAim ITATDllNT ~rattbl per-.onally or MMtd on you, flte with '"" The ~ penGf'I la med wtt11 the darti Of the oourt • written reeponM 10 dolna ~ ••· .. _"' llolll'WllOr ~ lnentlon9d COUt1 " the oomplelnt UniMI you A 0 T 0 R A M A 0 I 8 • r~ nu i iw. wrf time lftet the flr9t publl-:t.~ ~of:: T A I 8 UT 0 R 8 • 3 5 FICT'ITIOUa .ueMU :.i: :.i:: :: = plaintiff and UU court may Sheanwat«. !MM, Callt. MAm SfAJDmNT bid 1t1a11 be ~lied by ent• a ju6gemeld eoelnlt 92!~:,, ... Klrel'ton 35 The~-~.,. •~•d**Otc,rttfled you fOf thl re/ltlll ~ V I ' dOlna --• c:tleGk fnade ~t0 the In tbe complaint. wtlldl 8fleetW•t•. lrvlne, Calif TA"IPLE B ELECTRIC, adrr*Wlttatttc In the amount coukS ,.,,it In ga111111t1ment 92714 ttM TU9tln A¥MUe. A-235. ofat...,.l*\(1~)peroent -of~ taking of rnoMY ot Thia bu91neN 1' con-Costa ~ cA 92827 of the amount of 119 bid propeny °' other rellef r• cluCted by: an lndMduel RoOett s. Trtpp, 20421 'The .... w41 be made on ~-In tM cqnplalnt J, Kltehon 8ayvW# A¥8nU9, Sama Ana, the fOlloWlng t.erm1· caetl Of o.ted· Febn.Jwy 9 1912 Thll ttalwnent wae tlled CA t2707 IUCll .,. .. may be IP- GALE·s ENSTAD' with the County CWk of Or-'"'" bull,.... .. con-prcwed by tM edmlnletrattlx etenc Mge County on AuQuet t4, duc:*9 by: Art ~ and the •~tloned Publlahed OrMge Cout 1984 • Aober1 S Trtpp coun· the .-ate wtll pay the Delly Piiot AugUst 20, 27. . ,__ Thia statemen1 ... flled b(ot{.... oommlallOn. the $e9tember 3, 10. 19U Publlafled Or.nge20~ wlttl the County Cleftt of Or-coet of r~ ~ on M-108 OeJty Piiot August · · Mge County on~ 27• U.deed.thecoetofrwcord-~---------18eptember 3. 10. 19"4 t9M 1ng the order end deed ano ~ 109 ,_ elf of the Pfwnlum for .. ltlln- 1----------Pllblllhed Ortno-Coett d111d pollcy Of title lna\lrence Nl.IC fiollCf OaHy Pilot September s. 10. to be IMutd by ~ DEATH NOTICES 17, ~4. 1984 LANO Tide lnautanoe Com- fl'ICTmOUI IU..... M-124 Pfltr'l In the pf1nolpel amount DAVIS NAIM ITAT'lmNT ot the Hie and the EMlLY M. DAVIS The 1o11ow1ng pereon ta eectO'#holder'• fee: .. other resident of Coata ~M~ ~RITtHGS, rta.JC NOTICE ~~':= ~·~ Mesa. Paseed away 21301 Pfnelr• UM. Hunt-'1CTmOUl IU ... U euranoe fl'emlum ·al'lall be August 31, 1984lt the 1ngt0n BMdl, Callf 92t4e ...._ tTATDmMT prort11ed at the doae ot age of 86 years. lluth Orlean "4CDougle. The folowtng '*"°"' ., • ..a-ow; tide wtll be eubteci Beloved mother of 21301 Ptnetr• UM. Hunt· ®Ina bl.lllnllM. • to the ~Ion• fof1ft In Roger Davia of PlanO, bu~· HAWK VEHICLES. INC •• the pr~=~ Texas: Patrick Davia, dueled by an individual 3409P....,1 1 gr:~· ow by the title lnluranOa com- f p · Lake Minn· Auttl McOougle • ""'' • pany en A&agutt 27 1914 0 r:ior • • Thia ttet.ment wu flied Trlhewti,lnc ,a~ uncterhsOrdlfNo 25&52-1 Marlin L Bahop of with the County Clertl of Ot-corporation, 3700 W. The adrNnlatra"arhl rtp- Costa Mesa. Ca, Jae· 11"'9 County on Augutt 14, ~::...,"5;'2o1 MUwauk•. ~ts !Mt .,,. doM not quelme Christemen, 19'4 Thi• bu'*"-9 I• ~ know of tl'ft hidden csamaoe f S Valle '"'ft ~ to the parcel of rMI Pf°'*1Y 0 Wl y, .._ Publllfled °'11"'9 Coett ducl9d by:. COf"PO'•tlon It• lfl'ICltovementa Deep! and Dons A Rudolph 09ily Pilot AugUst 20, 27, '*'~rey L Bleutl*n. ~ r.rmll• lnfMtaUon and o f R o c k v 1 J I e , s.p1ernber 3, 10, 1914 Tnlt atatement wu Ned esemege tor wt1k:fl the Eateta Maryland .. Aho M·112 wtththeCOUntyClentofOr-_. ~ • ~ °' sw;nved by twen-Mge COuftty on Auguet 27, ~ting~~ : tyrune grandchildren. Ptll.IC f«>TICE 1984 naea pw. amoun" "' aceM and five great-grand-RCTmOUt IUIMll Pllblllhed Orange Coeat thereof to be borne by children. Mrs. Davia ....-ITATI..,,, Dally PllOt Septembef 3, 10. w,. ~ ~cn:r.:!~ had lived in th.iaarea ThetolloWlngpereon .. r• 17,24, 1984 ~~U..rney for 27 years, was a ~L~=A .. :TREATS. . M-t2'1 be lo the Pf~ eolely by member of St. John 3857 Biren st., ~· 1210. I'll•"' her own ~Ion ot the Baptist Catholic ~ BMc:h. Calif. 92&e0 Nl..IC NOTICE :!:property~=.: C hurch and th.e Cynthia DI Matteo. 50t =:Jown ln•,._1'ect b" • Cl Carnation Aw., Coron' del _._ ..,. Pf .,.-.. 1 Senior Citizens ub Mar. Callf. 92825 t IT•·~· .,.. 1 "NC1ural PM' eon of c.o.th Mesa.For 27 c t • r • A u g u a ' t n a MANOONMllNT CW· UU trol opantOt, In wNct\ ewnt yean the waa a clerk R0tnanue, 509 Carn= PICTITIOUr 8UllNIH ~ ~r:.:Of''!'Y r= in the Navy Supply :;:25Coron• del Mer, NM9 ancs the putcn...r'• own In- Dept. at El Toro Alt Thi• buatn.n 11 con-Th• tollowlng ~'°~ 1P9Ctton. The purcnuer u n---M f ~-'-.......... ~-have abaodOneCf t. .. u• "' "'"* eote reaponetbllty for PilQll:". ua o ........... duct ... w1 --Y-~-• th• Flcllllou1 Bustn•H ~ 11 c1amage 'o the tian Burial will beoel· ~~":.:~-:.. flied Neme. WINDJAMMER p;operly wlleU1•r 11n-ebrated on Tbun. with the County C1et1l °'Or-YACHS. M7t ~al Or . dlacio.d °' dtacloMd by Sept 6 1984 at 9:30 County on Auguet 14, Hunllngton BHcfl. CA the pu<chaaat'• °""in.pee. • S J hn th = 92t4e Uon Ot lnaC>9'1toft by lily AM at t o e 1 ,__, The Ac1ltloUI Bu~ ~peat oontrOI oper· Baptist Catholic PublWled o...,. Coeat Nam.r9*redtoat>owwae etor ..,, the operetor·r Church. 1021 Baker Dally Piiot AuQua1 20. 27. Ned In Ottno-County °" egent•. Tl'te purchH•• St C.O.ta Mesa. Pie~ September 3, 10. t984 AprU 25, 1™ Ate No. wtvee hit«'* ngrit to r• ' M· 1 1 1 F2444&9 cowr from IN Admtnll-Broa. Bell Broadway Fred J. Tflompeon. 1471 tratm °'the decedel••'• ... Mortuary. Directors Molokel Dr. Huntington tat• tor tl'ft ~not cs. 642-9150 Pl8JC NOTIC£ Beech, CA 92848 cloeedbytheputchaeet'lln· This bull,,... ...,.. con-"*''°" Of ,.......... bY e/ly McCORMICK MORTUARY 1795 Lagun• Canyon Road Laguna Beach, Ca 9265 1 •94-9415 HARBOR LAWN· MT. OLIVE Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave CoslaMesa~ . \ PIERCE •AOTH£RI BELL 8"0ADWAY MORTUARY 110 Bl'oa<lway Coata Mesa • 642-9150 IAL TZ HAOEAON IMITH a TUTHtLL WEHCUFF CHAPEL 427 E. 17th St. Cotta Meu 646-93 71 ftACtftC VIEW MlMOfUAL ftARK Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 500 P1c1nc VleYt Drive N wport Beach S.•·2700 '°' ,..,.,,.,,,_ .... ACTIO c.a 4 DAILY NOT • AO.YISOI. Ml·N1' .. • PlCTITIC>Ua IO .... U duct9d by a lndMdual 9'ICtl .wctutal s-t control NAiil ITAT'lmNT Thie atatetlWlt wu med ~ ~ ~IOl!owtng 1*ton1 are wttfl the County Cletk of Or-I.a a rnat.W. conelder· dol bUSIMM .. a11g9 County on Augutt 29, atton tor iM ~Of the 0 AHAM BROTHERS 1114 i:.~ lhe putc:MMr r• PROPERTIES, 2952 c.ntury Publlatled Orange Coelt tN Admlnla1ratrl• Place, Coeta ~. CA Darty Piiot Septembat 3. 10, and the deoeO«tt'• ett•te 92'28 11. 2-4, 1994 trom a1t llablll1y ~ UlcJuOh Rogef Graham, 12799 M-132 " may lat« be dteoovated Bonlt• He!Ohll Ortve. 8an1a • that th• Admlnt11ratrl• Ana, CA 92705 tlhOIAcl l\eW kno.n Of eny ~O!'don Orehem, 115• PtBJC NOTIC£ damage not di~ by Port Cerney, N•wport the pyr°'...,,' lnapac:tton Beec:tt. CA 92MO ITA,...,,Y cw or rtvMl9d by any aucti Thie buelntH ta con-MAllC)Ot.....,. etruoturll p..c oontrol In· ducted by A Q9Mfal 1*1-CW Ull CW epec:tlon °'~by e/l'I Mtehlp ACTmOUa tuCfl etructura1 s-t control Roger Graham au ... ta .,..... """*"°" or. ~ by Thia It~ WU flied The ~ JMttlORI t#'ft IUCh tttuctural P91I With the County Clertl of Or· haw at> the uae of comrol ~Ion '"'°" = County on A&9* 27 the Flofllrou• Bu•lnH TM .... Wiii be n.oa 'Zlm7 Name ARA AVTOMOTIVE, wttl'tOut warfanly .. to I 1) 3125 Kerry Lane. ~ta condlUOn of the land 0t tht Pul>llthed OrMge Cont MeM, CA 92121 implo..oamenta•(2) zoning."' Dally Piiot Seplembat S, 10, The flctJUCM lullMM (S) parmltted UM Of the 17• ~4• ltM N81M,...,.,... to abOW WM Pf°'*'Y and wlUIOul wit· M·125 fled In Oranot County on ranty of any otMt kind ol ---------•t~ll FllE NO F1'7ot27 natufe . P\llJC NOTIC£ Alfred J , o.nnan. '125 The Adrntnlttratrla re· Kerry l.Me. Coale Meaa. CA wwit the "°"' to rejlCt any fl'ICTITIOUI IUalNltt 92821 bid OI to 900IPI tl'ft bk! (tub- NAMI ITATtmNT Md,._ Harber, tot 8 tee' lo oourt ~.~ The loaowMg l*'ION ere FIQueroe, 8ant• Ana. CA '9rma ~ nvm •.-dolnO butlrlMI u 92704 lta19d abolle LEADS UNLIMITE!O, S Thtl bu9'Mel .... oon-.,_.... A. ....,_, ~ Corporat• "*"· Ntwpor1 dueted by. genetlll '*11*· ..................... ...... 8Mdl.CAt2MO • lhlp 0.11•1 CL· . JeaN Lame, 32 IMioout1 Thie etetef'IWll WU flled -..i W ....... A.., Drive, North, Newport with the County Cler1l of Or· •• Law, UH wut a.en, CA t2te0 .nge COiinTy on Ai9ii' ff. "°110 AW. M~~) JMML.Mla ,... .....c...... ,.~ Thia atatarMnt wu tiled Publlehed OrtinQJe Coeat M1.-. ~th u. county Clef1c Of Or· De!IY fttlot ...,,.,,,.o., s. 10, l"ubllaMd. 0tanve ~1 anQ4t COunty on AuQuat 27, 11, 24, 1tl4 Da.l~Not ~ · · 1tM ( ,._.. M-ISO S, 1 M·lfO Publiahed Ora11g9 co... Dally Piiot on hptember a. "" u1" c. t~ -o ..i\ .,. 1 _ Ti ~ f~ 10, 17, 24. 1N' '"".. ~ l'Qlt.J ~· "' J;;.<r • M·12t •--.,cu'• .ot1Alf - TI~E REAL ESTATERS GE 15Q.Q100 ------ ••• l • • •• 111/111 OP llmllTll WCI . ITlllTll Ulllll llY Sharp 2 story. 2 bdrm townhouse In prestige area. New earthtone carpet. Patio, garage. $89,500 Wll mCITIYl IOllE Roomy 5 bdrm famtW home In Fountain Valley Near greenbelt and comm. pool. Gourmet kitchen. $171,900. .f' 141-4004 Ex.citing C>Cean & Jetty Viewa, 4 Br, 3 Ba, 3700 sq. ft. car parking. $1,285,000. WIST llY &YI UYFlm At N.H.Y.C Traditional 5 Br spectacular bay view. Owner fin. $1 ,050,000. UllU WCI llWllE Panoramic ocean & city view, 5 Bd, 3 Ba, 'lpacloua for entertaining. Xlnt financing, now $835,000. , Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR ' 1 I' p ' I' • "-.; t4. f l r f, '(') 1 People NEED classifie.d For u1 by oWJter. Loving 5Br 3 ~ wllrg cloeeta, 3 car gar & boat launch .. Walk to beach. $379,000. Owner will finance at re bl rate -or buye! may carry lat at 9~!t fortt00;000.- 1124 IOILU . For appt to , aill J.~. W~lstnan (211) ·211·0llO PICTURE YOUR HOME HERE Private Parties · Are Welcome ~.11,~11111"'4 , 642-5678 THE :REAL ESTATERS Fii Ill.I IY IWIEI , · $15,000 to al umablr.. 3BD 3ba multi/leveled "model" Condo. 1650 sq. ft., prof onally de<.'Orati-d through· oul, pool, pa, cl • t.O shopping, echools, next to park, 2 c gar •. Total prt $139,000. 54~4484. .- • UIUll IUCH Ocean vie\\. 3 bl ks .to beach. Near n · 2 br. 2112·ba ... $249.500. Einancmg $220.000. I OY.% by owner. 414-1121 • 42•5-&78 . .. for Information & surprisingly low cost. --=~~·~~=========~==-L!!!!::::::::::::::::::=r::::=====~=-i.!~~=i::::::========~~~~====~..l-::::==:===--===~~~---~:----...~==1t=:==~·l t-. • •• .. • S*'9 the IRVIHE MIRPIOR Md the HUNTINGTON. 8EACHCOM8ER ..-y W9d~9!~ no aidra "'-""'" CALL TOOAVll Ul .. L .. YourDlllyPtlot . s.Mo9 owetOty. Aec:>r..-ntatlw uz..a11~.m .. &prt!!ab, Val. _ !prtaat1', Vaf. leatab It • leatalJ t1 Lo1t I ,,... 3004 ltlt Waat.. 1101 Btlt Waat.. 1101 ltlt Wut .. 'I J .... ~ Hit IU Jaa'i'"ea£ml -..... 2tol Sbrt Ztol llTI ....... OIKl/IAITD'I ' lllWL ..... mleh"'llt -T Loe 2er. 26: conao. pool, COM M/F, n-«nkr to lhare LooklnQ fOt ·~"*' lnt«Ylewl Monday thru 20 to 25 hrt per Wk, Mon . ll~f ~f~~· ii · deck, gar. No pett. 3. Br 2.,.~ S370 +lut + Prof MIF to shf tux. 2br FOUND ADS POf'tCM.Audl M«littanlc Friday, btwn 2 & 4' PM. thru Frld-.y. Ml.lit llke 0.-l•P ,,....... CARRIERS rt --H••~---:1 t&45/mo. 497-1874 $170 dep. Call 180-8043 apt N.B. TnnlHacq ball xtn.t pay, medical & .,.,,.'. 14348 CuNW. lrv!M. tall work and wllllng to ,..,.. *7· p/hr. 10s>m"1Jm• Sun-. HOO 8P&. pool S395· 769-8085 ef1ta. CHICK IVERSON Call 857-2103 train 984·2581 for Southern Orange Thur. Mua~ rg::. own INHEWPOATBEACH l!elu * ~ :~~~~.: :: , Prof to stir loe 3 bd(m AR£ fRE£ INC .. A.k for Mr. Kr.uM: COUNTER HELP I~,..._ ~Office: ~tZi.~:nc=,. :'':: ~ l~f'otdrr: A~ pe.oe to ffY9 on the 2lft· Tre.llet '°' 1 pereon S<l75 + dep ~255 home. In CdM, Avail lO/l S73-o900 PIT, Lunch M..f 94.00 to RECEPTI0 .... 18i: muat , ~ ctua.. auranoa. No c:ollectloM. Upper 8ay Private only. Quiet, no nolM. -937-5-4 11 or 780-2537 Can·. •wt CaMn 857·1302 type 35 wpm wtll tralfl on II ••• • Ulll•Y Phon9 Int~ no. clubhoute• ·& hHlth Dtlve by 388 Hammon. Fem 25-35 non-amkr 2 8d Rmt tees to hat NITIMW , Oonl"' .. ., 5-49-3942 ,....,,., __ •• being taken. (213) • Pn In •treet, walk In the 2be fully fum. deluxe NB • wan • • • IAZ·llll H~. rt11,..., ltU· NEWPORT DOMESTIC ___:::::...._ TUll•l lll'fD 4n-f463 =· ~ =:-...:. bectt. ~1r*' call ~.View $800 873-7248 ~=~~ ~~ M~ir:: dent1, FIT PIT temp help: AGENCY ---.,.,,... 7572 REYNOLDS, H.B. -~--=-~.,,.....,..,.,,..=- OC Airport, Fuhlon FEMALE Roomat• wanted S500/mo + utll. Gaf. caattlera, ticket taker•. UOPll-• Ulllll lllL flllAY M/f 847-7177 llllUl llNI llland, convenient ahopt Employed gentleman~ to..,.,.. lerge 2Br 18&. avail. Alk f<>< Debra daya parking attend. Eto. _..Plll-OlllPUllll Corc>otM• office ape>Mr~ 7~:30om 3pm-11:30pm onllght. amoker lit• kitchen Acroea the atreet from 759'-1114,~873-9270 FOUND: Male merle/wht Applylnper.on.M-Fti.-.,.. anc.,terV!Qe backupfor IUlllllTUI 3:30-t:~.Goodwork- prMegea 548.-7586 bellch. Bal. Penn. $400 + Seeill I. honeet Aust Shep mix & a me ~k tween 2:00 + 5:30 ...p·,,.,. s~921S:,mmedw'kT~t:'~ awlthboard operator. tOf' 71 Ul')ftMn IOUthttn Ing condition•. small mng ... 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart-In tumllhed Cotta Meta . utl 84&-™5 Terry ladyng 3~0 to •hr Terrie, rabies tag 5473. 1780 Monrovia Ste C-2 pt2..6142 Have own tranaportatlon 8a.n Diego. no P911, rio COnvei.o.rtt Hotpltal, m«itt & TownhouM• home 1265 per ·month Fem. w Perk Npt TwnhM w/aame. Beaut HB home ~656 ~ l~~~m:tt.'30 calpml for executive tunctlont. Children, 8*ldy wont h'*" near O.C. FaltQtOOnda. from $720. (Mk about call Chrlt 845-2435 apa, pool, tenntl, view. S325841·1490 FOUND yng tml black 846-3"5 .. fOf Debi Cuttodla.n. PIT, needed Call Pam 875-4K1 tQtY, ~ aalaty PIUt apt PleaM call M . 649-304S1 tumllhecl apt.I, compl9t• Lg Bd/pvt ~ kltch/lndry S<l50 mo. 7eo-9397 •-1 W .. .w w/aome wht Eng sheep 1pC:r38 ~~~t~ ~.~ IEIEUL lfflOE 751-5 .__._ INtt with TV, linens & utentlls. -.. 114 bfk to .,..., 1~ ea-k .... bttl--.. a.ala I aat ..v• dog ~ "4 ... · Verde BOOKKEEPER/ "'· .._. "·I~ W11111 C.N .. -.... = muat be rwnt_, for lhor1 t::.'..~ from Ne -~ r:~~~ ~ 'p""_.'"' HOUSE WlATED local 545-42.ri'Or 546-72~9 ACCOUNTANT fOt tOP HB cleaning . & minor flltlt ~perlence •-P•v • ll&lllllllY ·"·1 tK •xp«. term0tlonger) On Jam-""" . . . .,.._""""""'WVV\HO. ""'· of ptenda3Bd Co Payroll · AJP ~R abUlty.AUequlpprovlded typlngabfftty.ro ie .. t 5 yra ••per. run' pert, trme. G ~ Rd. at Sen JC*lulo '500/mo. S50 MC. dep. tennis. S325 770-8651 J: b ~ Sepl855-0902 l.09\: Sm rem aofden ret. 7 GIL on IOM. s.iary & ean Huber 845-3728 w/flgurea. 1 key by Scutptute A Sltk wrape. P •'Y . ca 11 or ace • H111t Rd. -only 548-847&-att 7pm ~ te>-W NB t hie to y yr old, REWARD. Chain Benefit• equal to exper . .DECORATE INTERIORS touch. EJCceltent com1 Some Cflente6e. AMt tbl 847-3515 144-1100 Nice furnished room nw-und. 38r 38' yrty 3 car Lf1t11 l11 collarvtcNB87~208e 842-4093 Color/dHlgn PIT. to ~:_t.f.~~~',;-•ft~o:: In Nwpt8c:ft .,_,,,..... -. -.,--,..--,-,MIQ---~75C: 5~,3~ gar 1433/mo. 828-0057 hat 2912 Pmea 1 •WH(.-./f II~ •tart. Wiii train. 775-5'47 845-5800 call f1~ ,.,k;~8 appt Fltlme for ama11 bUIY otc. r:.n. X1r• nice hM w/PQOIJ Slnc;t; garage rnu.... ~ ru I •DELIVERY PERSOH• . Sctry'I a~ e6cllll 2 Bd 1 ba. gar, nr beactl.1 .. Rm_l_n_HB_hol_m_1e_."""a..n--.-ct.-gar, w/d, S300 + lut. storage only. $75. mo. I / EL Thru financial ttatemen 1 FreeweyAuto28242AWlfY IUZtEI MECHANICSIHELPER +frontoffio.~anoe no S)9ta/W9terbeda. Yf'ly pendable. $300/mo, 1st H.B. Al/Deb 842·7338 631-80&3 · Outcall ONLY 835-9199 Incl. payroll, all tu• & Part<....., Mlaslon Viejo QP«. ~hrs. Paid medl-O'#n toola. MacGregOf req. Ute bkl\pg lklll• ,_-•1501 87"7'"..., & last oa'LI\GG7 lnsurencea. Computer --,. cal, vacation. 53M5e1 Vachtl, 1831 Ptac.nUa, pref. Good ~b·rft. • -• mo. ~ .,,_ · ~·· F thr ~CM Home S80 mo ""let lta'"'ll "l .. f--•I experience an aaaet. ......... •*..__ M F • ,.~ "" ni •• " ··-· ..,.. .... w---no exp -___ --.ta M... mutt $8·110 r.e75-9080 2BR 1'M>a, patio S575 Room and kitchen prM-+ ml mal aulst. fOt DI• lenitt1 30l4 Muat be aelf •tarter 10-3. $4.00/hr NHAM -~"" .......... Bllc;h. fuU kit, ,.rrtg $395. leges. near bua & lhOP--U>led teec:n..~357 &llPllJ &ID w/endurance ablllty to 759-1122 Apply ~10/3-5 Full time, daya. Xlnt ben-1111111. lllllYUT lfF...-r HUlmL SMcllft Manor ~2e82 ping cent•. K2·5780 Male profeMional 21-31 to Two 150 aq ft prof otca . WOl'k fut pace position eflta 4000 Hllar'la Wey, F0/80 -Ophthalmology. Part time wttkend• and 28' apt & gar. S750Jyrty. B1ttb .... tb BOi ahr lge ~ti hol'M. N· w/wndw view. 2381 Cam-*OlllllllL SPA* w/expandlno company, lllYll..clllllEI Newport 8Mch Good Tranecrl~ akllla. ~. G~.J ~ t 13 1/2 29ttt St No P91• -smkr 842-!«2 Diana pus Or '211 IMne. Cor-II --WOI attractive benefits With Pert time tor busy IMne .... ..,,RPO Call Peggy 84&-3242 YOICe. Call 751·A22 .. .Joa (213u.·""~502 · SIU 111-· ner Campua & Von Kher-11&wr ... 1 ch~ of advancement. T ,_. ., __ .. _ ••~ .,. •• req. r---v WlttY ;;,;'::,~van Mlf. Btwn Bay & OQMn. ma11. Incl Recept, Ana Manage and Ac-Ca11Arlene851-9520 ra"" QWJ~"'•· Motor· Uve In. Newport BMch. llllllALUIUllD llllltnml'T IU&/Wk & Color rv· '4BR . ava1r 1mmed ave. Cont Rm & Coffee cuprwure. Opeo 7 daya cycle nee. Hrty P~ mfl• Room8nd boerd + aalary 20to 25 tl1'9 I*' week. o.netal malntaln~ec> Newpott Hta 2BR. frplc, ....._ 1 up. ' 850-2837 aft epm $400/M 752·.2'484 1oam-12am. 493 N. Old BOOK KEEPER want.CS age. Mari.. eeo-9200 In •ltdlano-for hMvy Must have car and In-cepUng appllcatlOn• pool carport no ,.ca ,...,.,,..,_ " room. · Hewporc Bl ACC>Ma E. for architectural deelgn h o k nd chlld 3333 W. Cout H !+.&. *8ao1mo. tM2-7858 227'4 Newport BIVd.C.M. Need roomat• to"'' furn. UIT H .. IT, o.•. Frontage Rd at 15th St. firm P/T. Elq)etlenc• 11m1 TUllEI OUHW r a auranoe. Saltry + mli. . wy, • 64&-74.45 2br apt., at Eut 18th Pl. 2~ ofcs &. lrg Sctry/~t South 2 blOci(t req. 114-845-'701 QPpOrtunlty for advance-IUper'iltlOo for boys 12 & ege. Call 984-2.581 _M_on_·_Frt_·_t-_s ___ _ Newport T«raoe 3 bdrm C.M. $280 mo. 848-7802 700/mo. Bkl au... • M b 14. Can bt student Of p•-T1111 2'A ba $875 mo $1075 latal1 te ,_""""' {714) 548-7208 bookkeeping ment. uat • high ~Ofkg11-~'.th1me •• .:. ~~.,!., apeak •• _.. IDllLL LYIOH STUDENTS,PAEJie EARED MC No P911. Family pm. 1Wt 2HI M.,Jo_ lhr beau1 NB Tnh•. EXECUTIVE SUITE fill c•••g ~hool ~::;,:~~· gd ... ' 111 ... ,........ .,,.. ID.lllTlll 845-3785 f rm-3£ conao. t;S;fC, ~~mo pool. ,~uc!:t. Liberty Bank Bulldlng, a1lat119n. f0l4 111uiiPD ~must l\M cu:i Oood refa. 7fS0..2&90 . ..,.'flllYY '!i!°~~i.~=~ VERSAILLES: 28R 2ba, rdwd deck, w/d, pool, ~~kn, ly. Huntington BHch-Thrt1 ftnanclal statement• OMV printout. Apply at: lllSlllEPllP/l p\ul, C'fttien req. comer 3rd nr. Avt -t apa, ale S325 after 8 cell 898-5050 lllll4 PllmlU 2 ,.. + law firm u · Freeway Stor•. 2708-Mature, rellable, non-W• ate a lelldlng t~ Call M PM 15. 11000/mo 850-0504 720-9205 AtlC t0< Rob N/~klw:beps to beactll Newport Center Olll·IP UIUllUT pr!f. 84.4-9190 Lita per BC Harbor BIVd, Cotta 1mkr,)l•x hrs. 87~192 tlOn manegement nrrn Hunt Bd'I 964-2890 Watef'front 2BR t ba. 1 car *Mllhr 3br hM. Nr beh 4 It ' crptr,Cleen· mllTIYI IJITU High C; net, dr. Meea. &58-0~ t'foueekeeper wanted. FIT tMklng clerlcal em· 1 •••••••• gar, $850/mo. Avail now. no P911 .val 9/15 S325 gat, S325 850-5 54 Full ave, fr• rent w/leue. 545-254 NB~!~~~~ 1 DRY CLEANING & jtAUN· or PIT 11udent OK. 17.00 . ~:=n~:at~:~~pt~~~ PART-TIME, Vatied hourt a1wn1 ' Rola 1st~1ut + dep 631-0757 N-lmkr working fem 30-50 844-6800/873-1700 eve llTTEI TIU Tiii . • • men DRY HELP. F~ Houra I*' hr. CdM 780-0822. ,..,. ...... Ion • :C,. ..... to loclud• early A.M. ytt to lhr ept. S330 +utll, Co., reaP<>ollbltltlee In-. 6 eta-84.4-4421 ,,_....... • --.....--..._ .. _ M·-ha-a. Yeatty • stepa to OCMn. 3 Bdrm, 1 ba, W.C.M.full 11t & iut. 842-5934. 0C AIRPORT arM, only 1 ... 11111111 elude preparation of i -· INSERTING Mach Int ptltude akllla. . t typt _.,..,., -• •• 1BA S<l20--BACH S<l20 prlvlledg... Big yard. tulte left, 350 at, 1v~lable "TA UC ING MAIL ORDER" Journal entr ..... 9C()()Unt Elec:1rlclan Oourneyman PNlabQ operator l foldet 50 wpm 6 be ablil to WOftt l*'dable Yehlcte (small Agt. 845-3e83 $275. 831-0503 OCMnfront NB hM.4 Bd now, xlnt Vlslblllty, comer Preeently employed, hap-bal8"Ce analyllt & u.-Merine) Only harcfwori(er wanted tor top NB mall well under pr...ure • ...., truck, ven. ttatlon ... Iii=:•..,• "'Tl 8Mut 1 3br2 ttoryVllla, 2ba,frplc,W/0.1 rmmte of Recs Hiii & Bristol plly married men & alttancelnpreparatlonof neeclapc>(y. houM. Day & Evening Mtateknowttdca-helpfUI. ::g:>J:.:"~ ': .,_. ,, •• nr Sti~lng walk to M/F S350 548-2033 $435/mo. women from all walk• of flnanclal atatementa. Ron Manning 5'4~918 ltllfta. 8.42-4"3 Good o:::::r benelntt Muat be depen.. &OM to m . sunn. bellch aecurt.Y 90 deg of Prof/F 25-35, non-1mkr. R' H ~~~e;~~ENTS fife needea. If you have Handt-on HP•rl•nc• mo.1111nuY IElllL lTTUllll ~ Send~~ =·· Contact Oreg i,•~~~1~~:.: ocean'v!ew.493-a148 ~.=~~~:1~/~ OC Alrprt ~ ofc ape. ~1t-O~.':."f~~ S~~~~ ,!Oef~X Greeter lrvlne Credell 3-7PMwkdys.4M-1078 1 P.O.' Box 1954e, lrvtM, =:,~'!:Ffo~~ . 837-7918 Seo Idle Item• 642-5678 Vickie 759-9315 •ft• 8. 830 alt. Lott of perking, and we wtll aend you e 8708-126, Nwpt Bch Union, haf an ~~1!~ Utlgatlon Sectetaty for CA. 9271U3--964.18 • m. onlY. 54· 2-4321 • I I rt U •~• a1 10 11 free lnfOtmatlon kit. Our 92858-1708 open no or an ,....9C\11,... _ _..I *'--1-"~ 1 1iiiiiiiililiiillliii•• ant • ut """'· . a • "Talking Mall Ofdel'" 11 Secretary. Typing 85 t1"rm_, um -'1n•"' .. ·.,~ -------- mo to mo OK. 557-7010 Ilk• no other We now lllMI• wpm, lhofthand = 11e1::':'to oC Air: MlllU =~-m...,P""'IT=--.....-.--,e""'1"""3-<""'f.4"""2=1 ~ 8P80e for leue. have people making exper. for day shift at req. Xlnt co. ta, ~· hMJth Ufe dental for llngerle thOP. Fun & 873--9424 aftr 2pm NB Cannery VIiiage loe. S<l000-$8000 p/mo. net gourmet Nwpt rel· medical & ·dental. Salary lnsu;811Qe iaJ · baaed wy money. 5'M444 Mk for gall or ROM ----IMiii@i -SYDNEY 0MARR 850 aq/ft free-standing, profit dofng thla. we taurant. 875-2588 open. Contact Vlroll. on ~ 8(Iood or--------- .ingle 91ory building supply all m..,_, A•• w••1 568-3110 ganlz.atlonal eklllt & .iLI PllTI W TUllll Immediate OCCYpancy IYPi>IY follow-up. all --FLORAL DESIGNER MnM of Mlm« required Lenny's Halt Salon wants Full time & eeaonal. Ideal $800 mo. e7M918 TurMr Enterprt ... (819) perton. Mon·frl exper exper. F/PT 1q;e att Contact Fran 833-3822 · worNn, tOee 11·30 Wlt1'I fw IUPPlemental lnoome, •CdM dluuttes AC empt 295-5020 ext 379 pref 751-0749 a.pec:tt of lhOP wOtk experience po1lng & Clef1cal. packtiglng, pro. . CHILDCARE/"'•""-' I 845-0093 Liv• In Hou•••••P•r modeling for photo Uhl• ductlon printing. tpOt-prkg, !Tom 1225. 2&55 E. •mg1•11, ,,,_, .. tter n needed. Balboa 11. H,. blttona and hair thowt. ting. Locat9d lft EJ Teto Coast Hwy. &75-6900 T r..1 .. o•• my home 2 days/wk for 2 Food Prep· M-F 10·3 4.-. to aam 87M275 s·•·-It a coneuttatlon off Lake Fore11 Dr • • 'I .. kid•; age 2 & 5 846-0281 . . ..... • _, . ulan1 I I Umll $4,60/hr no ex~ NHAM t.lv•ln matur• hou••· and helrcut °' oolOf a. 7a&o5100 Taffday,Septeinbert IHta.11 2tll • OllUIA;ll appty9'-lots-5 69"1122 kMP«.Muatdriv.aood :r,0~~~~ --P=R=e=ss""M=A_,..,N,..,.-- ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19). Dnve, energy tend~ to .. swc.epaway .. STORE telse: 125(1.q fi. lertaut lt.111. ~::C9=;7~· a-. nll/TllllPlf htalth, tr• to trawl, r.r dHlred Call Lenny Small~~ In HB need• opposition. You get what you want, including promotion and Prime Newport Bl CM 1o-S~ In lat a 2od aya P •U1'111MI WNI req. 49M909 875-0823 CdM ~ A.B. Dick additional monetar) reward. You'll finish project. love will replace oatlon. 1680/m~. 675 AobtTg~::,nce 1':,~/CM OllLIDUIWllllll . OppcrtunltlH avallabl• LIOID... 1.._. ...... ~i.S::::;· loneliness and there will be greater secunty . Another <\ries figures 7788 or ~8-0881 RE &oker 8d Aealtor1 Chrlttltn actMpply with the LOS A.NQELES Men'• Club N.8 , Set. 7•7, ••-.. ,. prominently. -C·~~ere1ial .. I 842-2171 546-0811 14183&Br~~~~ ~:n~::,cu:;~ °:; ~:;6·7~~~~3 n8:i Motor Rout• avatlablt In Tl~='.!\~ TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): You make "unusual" d1sco-.er). -•ta 1 .-1 Belt Waat l .. , ...,... d00t newtpaper .., .. Tuet ~ BMch. your'• worth? Com- Focus on commun1cat1on. travel. education and spintual value~ CM/NB mh & Newport -.,.......... program. Guar•ntHd 1--------Mutt be 18 Vtt Old. h.W mltlon Salet lookl.ng fOf Loved one is "far away .. but relation!.h1p will be reestablished You arr Newer 1000•2200 aq ft Busy Newpot1 Beech ~ wage ptua com-To ptaoa your meeuQ. depenC!abl• trenapor· lndlYldual who nffdl going to get to heart of matters. Leo plays significant role. anu>JePkg al.~ 87.s-esoa llllT •TOI lneurance Clalma offloe mlttlon. Kourt; 4pm to before the ~ $2000 wk+. Cati Tom at GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You learn through unorthodox · • a full time olertt tpm: 1-m-nv I• teelngPIJtllle, but "'·-'240f lACUNA BEACH lllm IVllWLE typist. OU11ee w1111nctuese provided. Potent111 to phone not neoeetary . ....., .. ~-·----------procedures. You could "happen"' upon valuable information lEASHi OPPO«TUNITY · computtr tntty llght eern '300 p1ua per-.ek. Oalty Piiot '450-600 per month. Call PIT 3 Da)'I • wk•M/W/P. Judgment, intu111on tend to be on target and asM>C1ates might he Outaandlno PCH 1ocat1on 1n0~ ~~~a= typing, nung. etc.' For a.n tnterllft, cell: c1ua11ted. 842·6818 lOam to •pm. omo. & boet c!Mnlng amazed by your methods. Cancer. Leo, Aquarius. perwm. figure 1n w/Ooean Views. Ideal for dependa'bi;· car; Wiii UP*C:,1 M•r'ICIOu~~~~;133 057-23e1 ext. 120-4 141-4111 913-8511 call A. Crlap .. sccnano. retall, Office,"' flnandat. train. EJ<peri.nce helpful. .. """'......,. -=--· · CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Be pos111vc conCTmtng spec.ml 735 aq tt. to 2500 aq ft. &m .oo..~ u, ,..,i---ILDJUl.~~--­ documents, legal rights and permissions. You'll get green light. hut •vall l.Alndk><d wur 5UllCf month. Call 8'42·43B3 uont off1Ce for medic.I .. I .. p I d d to SUit cau Mr Redllch 1"--'"'pm. llT &:la""' . full/part time. someone wants tO r tag a ong. OpU anty increases an SO OCS \.Our (2 1.3) 820-'4181 ~, •• ,.:_... .,,. 24 , weilflt. unless care1ul conceming diet, nutnt1o n. .......,. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Focus o n details, special sen Ill~. '~CUrll) •·•••trial IAILY PU.IT OUllUL/ .. U n .. employment an~ dependents. Pos1t1on 1sstrong. you lan ncgn11ate:~ou ltatal1 1120 POtftton avellabte for ex- should also realize that ultimately rev1s1ons will have 10 be ~riwsl\ 1838 SQ Ft lnaut1fGJ Bld;. ~ n""'11krln loCal considered. Scorpio plays key role . 1000 h offlcea, Fenced · · lnv.tment oo. Call for VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Emphasis on chamma.cker\onaht> IMMylfll. Nr HarborBIYd AllUlllll • appt btwn 12-3pm M·F. Physical attraction and possible travel. Accent also on chil ren , an'"t'' ' ~5 Fwy; l2,900/mo IYDllll 845-3187 Shlrtey " NNM 714-640-4102 Agt · , ..... and .. confrontat10n" ·with "old flame." Gemini Sag1ttanu<i and .-------.n.-.r.. one of Amertc:a • -ino CUIJUl another Vireo figurc'~qmJncntJy. Chan.sc format. copyr1ant concepts. tara11 Hatton.I Marte.Ung Firms Girl to anlWtr teltphone LIBRA (Sept 23-0Ct. 22): Emphasts on sccunty. home. longterm E·Ca.t• U ... atorag• ~now, =road';! ni. typing, errandl. Nlo9 commitments and major domestic adjustment. Key now 1~ diplomacy, room, 1~'10' eecur• tal>M' -.,,O 1nJoy atmoaphef• In Ltguna capcc1ally when dealing with family member who talks about travel. S30 842"2227• publtc COf'ltact. w1 ~-_Beedl __ ._4_9_4-_aoo_5 __ _ moving. chana•'!J residence. Another L1bran plays key rok PIT employment for OUIJIAL · SCORPIO (Oct. 2~-Nov 21 ). Relauvc'I. 1ncl~ding brother$. sisters. IY PAii A1e1 Clftentld lndtvlduatt 1mm.o1ai. °'*tno for Of• could figure in tnps. v1S1ts. unique repom. H1ahhght ve~lili ty. ac.'Cent SS** tw.i ble ICfote who .,.. lnt.-t.cs In genlled lndMdl.lal to ... ~nse of fitnc s. show you arc capable of laugJ11ng at your own foibles. fr0m OONn. 5384318 ~-=-..!) ~~-cu~~ :: You'll gain acCe5\ to pm·att> information and be happier as rc~ull. .... 3 + bonul F°' In..,,,. amoklng'tlffloe Aooutat• SAGmARllJS (Nov 22-0cc 21) < ycle moves up. money ....... call: Mr Blumer. typing, nuno end phOM maucr!art not a\ dire uon;inally ant1c1patrd. This can be a rcd-kncr A::"~A~1r~D~NGS 1 645-5778 work. APPfY tn l*IOn or day-for fin?n~and lovr You·u locatrlostan1clc vou'll ~unbhsh a CounMC'ino. 111;1 :' 9 AIDE -uw"' needed tor ~ r111Ume to.zt11 W. !Ohd, rewarding, challenging relat1on.,h1p Camino ,.._,San ci.n. tlancSICIPf*i oetacn In °: A:_~og:~::J'. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22~Jan . 19); C)'de htt\ peak -take 1mt1at1ve. Uc'd. 492·72M COM. 7ecMl5lO alary commaneurat• Sttk widet audience. break away !torn re,tnct10n$. You now have SCR·"·LETS an 1111111 WIUf*. arand opportunity to ~ rid of unnecessary ex pen~. 'rtmov' burden. IUll COUPLE wl••IJ'' tor -.---...... ---- ;~~n~t1)'.nt11 your own to carry 111 ~"' plac.-c An~s fiauru ANSWERS ~': ~=.~~ ParMm-.-. ~,,.N'lxt"'a.• l10utt. AQ ARJU (Jan. 0-Feb. 18); You'll make new stan. U-o nall\'C V«Nl·StOk• l42"o'807,wtutvs 10-cPM COi':'~ Ott ell will help you. Aq.anan will become valuablt Uy and )Our own • ~-f AnENDA Uv.tn intu1Uon will ~rve as reliable au1dc . Romance flourishe!. vou'll be RELATIVES OIMbled lildlef. Lo CM Ollltllll • fi l 1 ~ t ... '-1a t If '*"-· "". 64$-23'7 for bteefltrom hoitl ~ more con tde t. you·1 ~tn itt.ater rutu~ and you could hit financial ~ 0t au~'u VoU po ..... affective ~· JICkpoi. • cowr m':'· f:o ~ &111• munlc&Oon 11111 1be,....t • PJSC ffeb. I 9·M1rch 20). W1Sh come, true 1n unusual. A LATIVet1 LoOIClng '°' .x'*1el1Ced In apptarenc:e. '*'°"" unorthodox manner. Fam1J) i~ in vol\lcd. mon~ pla~ paramount role · Ct1evro1e1 M•chan1c1. eb" and tetnll wtta and so doc tru\t, conlidcn~. utum:uc unty:vou hav~ m~1dt lf:Kk, ~~ c~~4: ::i~ Pll,:.1~~AS~ t:lh·~.,t~~ ~ whollttmporunlyronhnedf ·n rd ind ull nliinow f:IM.~ fliftft 1 .liif ror t<r .,ACSmlnofe,:fOt 11 2495°'131 eri-ogoo oe. II • I • District Managers f! yov ~njoy working with ycw~ boy1 & girl1 and detk jobs ore not for you. con1ider a corffr In tfle ntw1poper <irculo• tton fleld Th11 " o unique ~•1tron with doily chollen9n &. r-ord1 Our opt1Mg; Ofl 1mmtdi0te Appltcon11 mv1t hove o von, itohonwooon or truck Wt otfer on ••<t>llcnt olory w1lh a b<HIU1 pion ond go• ollowcmce, We have on e11ct>llent benefit pion tflol 1nclvd ' hoip1 ,. tolttotton insurance. ·ltberol vocation ond holido.,, Condldole1 mult have o dHJre •o b4 111((tnf1.1I ond bt W'lllrng to work hotd If · you 1t11nk ~ ho,. the quaM1tohon1, $>1C'O~ apply 1n person to1 the lily Pilat / . . Onday thru F114J(ff 9 11 om°' 1 • pM 330 W. Bay Costa Mesa, CA 92626 . Newspaper KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! AGES 11·14 EARN lf TO $75.00 PER WEEK . Wt llO" lllft IS .-CS lof JOUt11 tapr ba•en to sec1111 ,..,, lo! Tiit o,.,._ Coeit Daily Nol Ovr crews Wit at 3 30 p • and "°'• 111!~ UO p m ftddays Oii Sahirdaj, we wort a In lllOft howrs You .. earn many ltips and PflllS. alona with tnJll JOllt own ~ tliete is no ddi,.,,,,_ or cOllKbon inwol•td H row art 111teresttd, 11¥ase call Mt. Cart (714) 548-7058 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE AC"Oat 1 Soclalunll 5 Equtvoca1ort 10 Hatwlt a CfOC> 14 lnereae 15 Uncalled '°' 111 E~hing: pref 17 Prec>C*llOl'I 18 Bocty of llWI 11 Cigar ttump 20 Sea Fr SO. Courteous 52 Oeer'1lrail 53 Doggy doc 54 Ru-.n name 55 Bottom line 57 Pollan 58 Enlrenc» 59 Mah IOYfVI eosme11 Cl 1 Snow vetlicle 112 Challeno« 83SwlSIClly DOWN 21 Camera part 22 Furniture 24 Fuel o•• I Mal<a wavy 20caanv ..... • 28-Anxlallaa 3 Star· pref 27 Insect 4 Latest pref 21 BuU•laa 5 Radiant 3i Oiacol'IU~ 8 - -.., and .. ,. Ouicll 7 And• 1 aum 35 Eggs 8 ,... remorM 31 Electrtc ut1111 9 NaV\gaUon abbr;----lnttrumefttt 37 Cand• 10 Crnntnal 31 Unite 11 Milky hqu•dt 39 T0<n ~ 12 In front. pref 40 Co4!9P.NI 13 Chetry part• 41 Hard dliMd 21 Air route 23 Chichi • 42 Ma•• ready 25 00 by • 44 sm. hOuM 28 Staoa groupt 45 eap.. 28 Window partl .e Own 29 """'lou• \ I • 2 • 1 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 41111 31 F11t1 --. ........ --.ua.----·~~iiiii;;;:;;;;;;~~~~. '41 Nicllal -II 32 MOllam ruler 33 Of legal a.ppeell ,. lntee1 COion ... 37 Sold 31Col*hOM •o~ 41 -and FQUl¥j 43 Hurt • • 47 SllPlhfllY 41 Spancsh man 49 Un1n11111n9 50 Farm an.malt 51 ElllptiQI 52Asier1111 5e PatmlMI v r 57 Hait It~ \I'•! I I'"" SOUTHWEST I r • • LARGE SELECTION OF NEW & USED BMWSI L•Wll-voLUME SALES SERVICE & LEASING 3870 N Cherry Ave. LONG BEACH• (No. cn.rry axlt-485) llH)HM1M trect.-IM Welc:Ome OPEN SEVEN MYS • • • • .... ........ ,.,.., . .,...)Ill"' ..... ..._ 714-833-1300 BRJSTOtlil EDUlG ·111 SANTA AJA Ml·OllO t'AMJLYSI lllE llCIEIU'S som coum IOTOIS ~ 1114 UlllT •1111111.1 Wolfsburg Edition 't"'°CEL • $236 74 ...... "'"'° TOP I 1)J520 '4 C»ltS• S250Cl CAP 1-.c:tioll ~sseooa ® 1114 SlllllOI 11 ... 1&11ua1 41moCEL SUI • w S* "'° TOP I 12.019 20 CAP 112000 Aeeod.,., SS1 08 ®' 11UYWIHIL IOmoClJL• S22t.M • WI per mo TOf' I 14 IM IO CAP 1 1• etS S2000 CAP tedue1IO'I ~ssa.-oeo 1114 llnLU 'tmoCEl 1217 • \&I C* fnO TOP $!1040M C.Al" 111 500 S60Q CAI" f-..CllOl'I ~~·· < \ l )Ii I . \( '74Y~Slwp eMr"P. Lo mJ 17175, ......s711 ~30 MUl'I ... 71~4 apd, rune get I 1100/000, ~1 CONN Ell CHEVROLET '\.~If.,-•. I r : ' \• ........ S46-I 200 .. . 'IO AESTA GHIA Good condition. 1 owner. s 1800 obo 173-11.U Lia• 1942 RELIANT SEDAN AW. CN!le. AM/FM (3117.a) ..... 24 mo124.000 1\'11 .v c:ntn:t. alb/prior .... IP.lm!CAA \ ~LEMING USED CAA w ES 16401 ...,, Hum lk:fl l47·1707 .. I .• . GARDEN GROVE CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi '41 E. Ce'ast ~., h11ptrt leao• · 171-0IDI Highest Quality Sales & Service ·o NABERS CADILLAC ~? ...... 2100 HlllOR ILVD., COSTA llSA (114) 140-1100 (213):111-1211 •Best Prices •Convenient Location • Gr.ea.t LD~n • SJ.Jper Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People ' . . .... . . 'W ESTMINSTER' .... , .. . ..J 0 _, ... -~ . a:i SANTA ANA _, EDINGER · .. 0 THEODORE RO.BINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail D_ealer Modern Sales. Service. Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts. Competitive Rates On lease & Daily Rentals 2010 larMr lh•., Cnta 1111 142-0010., 140-1211 0 . SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU --- 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntlhgton Qeach . (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE Oranae Countys Latcest Volkswa&en/buzu Dealer We Will Not Be Uil6efsolcl PARTS OCPAR'TMENT OPEH SATURDAY m , .OAAY FLADEBOE HONDA G RAY FLADEBOE VOLKSWAGEN . . . • # 11 ht• Ceater Ir., lnl11 In The Irvine Auto Center ' 830-7800 Complete Sales, Service & Lessing - G> ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT . # 1 /11 Tb1 W11t lor 111• Jffp Sl/11 For I Y1ars 1 , OC':n~e • sALEs i-•SERVICE -L oa t. LEASING , .... , mt:_~~-=.~lvo • ACCESSORIES DEPT 549-8023 !f 20 lift 0.1ter Ir., lnl11 tn Ttre trvtmJ Amo Center 830-1300 Orange Countys Newest Volkswagen Dealer Complete Sales, Semce & Leasmg ~ ~. STERLl~G R "' Ul1S -S£1VICE -LWllG -PUTS Overseas Delivery Speclall•!• ,ARTS DE,AATMENT OPEN 9ATU80AY MORNINGI BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach ,_ 840-8444 .. ~~-------• -~· . 91 FWY. . . . :, ' - IRVINE '· . . . ' . •.. - ... . -. LAGUNA. HILLS 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET A 2121 lar~er lh•., C.sta 1111 Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sates • Service • Leasing 546· 1200 Special Parts Liie 546-9400 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -6:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 STADIUM PONTIAC . We're New -We're Dealing Acroaa from th• Big A on Katella Juat Weat of the (57) Orange FrHway Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises l11h1I• 2221 E. latelli 311· 1111 BILL YATES ·I .. . . .. .. --' . .. ., . -. .-- MISSION VI ~~~ Mt$$/ON VIEJO SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO BAUER "MOTORS BUICK -4JAGUAR -ISUZU • • COfn'*"e Automotiv.!leeda SALES • SERVJCE • LEASING Fine Selection of Quality UMd Vehlclel I 1 BUICK DEALER IN OAANOE COUNTY; 2125 HARBOR BLVD. -· COSTA MESA -979-~ 0 AA Y FLAi>EBOE LllOOLI IEIOllY .1111111 lllZI #11hf101.lfer Ir., lnli1 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7000 G CREVIER BMW YILllWllEI • PlllOIE • PEllEIT SALES • ..LEAS.lNG_ •..PARIS..• SEBVJCE 12112 Y1ll1 111•, 111 .1111 01,11tra1111 SALES • SERVICE • LEASING "Where Professional Attitude Prevails'' Speclall•lng In Eu=~· ExMllent lelectlon of New and cat•fulfr 811W'1 always In afock. 411-4111 . ll1·4IOO 835-3171 20I W. 1at St., Santa Ana Corner of Broadway & 11t St. Clo~ Sundays G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE GJIM. SLEMONS IMPORTS .. HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. 13o1 Ou•// St. -N•w C•r Loc•non 1001 Ou•ll St. -R ... le Dlfll1lon World's Largest Select/on of 0 Costa Mesa 540-0713 Mercedes Benz · . 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. -~9300 . -Salts • lwJ11 : Pitts · Strilct • 1MJ ,..., ' Class1f1ed adver.tising is your best • choice for help in solhng the items you no longer need. It's quick and inexpensive. and the Pilot reaches potential buyers who hve 1n this area. Call today. DailJPilat l "\. /